Suggestions for RGZ Objects to show with detailed FIRST contours overlaid on SDSS images
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by WizardHowl
Here are a few suggestions for objects to look at in more detail with FIRST contours overlaid on SDSS images rather than WISE band 1, as JeanTate requested a few that might benefit from a more detailed examination in http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000002/discussions/DRG000017n and http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000006/discussions/DRG00004rh
Initially I'm selecting a sample with an unusual host galaxy (disturbed-looking or extended and potentially disk-like), to help check if the correct host galaxy has been identified. There are 20 here, which could be a lot of work, so pick and choose whichever seem more interesting (the first in the list is the one I would be most curious to see, personally, although the FIRST signal is really faint):
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000jzh overedge source looks huge in NVSS, diffuse in FIRST, host is disk?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002znm bent-looking doublelobe, irregular host galaxy
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001gr4 corejet or two compact sources? nearby disk galaxy
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000hsx hourglassplume, two candidates for host, one seems spiral
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001at4 possibly hybrid, optical candidate for host is faint, slightly irregular
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000328n bent-looking doublelobe, irregular host
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00027yg two radio galaxies here, is one spiral or is it a background source?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ycl odd host galaxy but is it really the source?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003o4w complicated emission, even more so in NVSS, possibly Xshaped?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000d99 hourglassplume, which is the host galaxy?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002da8 doublelobe, is host the disk galaxy?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002g0s one or two radio galaxies? one clearly disk-like
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001vwu messy emission, is host disk or background source?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000ava doublelobe, is host lenticular?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003q2w hourglass, is host spiral? on boundary between SDSS observations?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ozz hourglass, is host a disk galaxy, or even a star, or background?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000150p hourglass, odd host, or is it a background source?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ool small triple, host obscured by star in IR, is it disk-like galaxy?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002j29 two disk galaxies? star formation or corejets?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000318m overedge Xshape with disk-like host?
EDIT: Additions
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001iym hourglass, disturbed non-red host (added 16:44 15/07/2014)
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002gbx doublelobe, very faint non-red host (added 12:04 26/07/2014)
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000129x restarted triple, giant? host merging? (added 20:47 26/07/2014)
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000whi bent overedge doublelobe, disk host (added 18:19 31/07/2014)
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
Thanks very much for this, WizardHowl! 😄
the first in the list is the one I would be most curious to see, personally, although the FIRST signal is really faint):
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000jzh overedge source looks huge in NVSS, diffuse in FIRST, host is disk?
It's certainly a complex (set of) source(s)! 😮 But, sadly, it seems the disk galaxy is a mere onlooker 😦
It seems there's a doublelobe in the center (host is ...?), and on the E a faint triple, whose host is in the center of the central FIRST contours.
<>
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST (red) and NVSS (cyan) contours derived from FITS files produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image (ARG0000jzh; J2000).Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000318m overedge Xshape with disk-like host?
Two versions:
Pretty messy ...
<>
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST (red) and NVSS (cyan) contours derived from FITS files produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image (ARG000318m; J2000).Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ycl odd host galaxy but is it really the source?
It's a pretty amazing source, perhaps even an overlap? But it may not be the host 😦
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST contours derived from FITS files produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image ([http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ycl); J2000).Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000hsx hourglassplume, two candidates for host, one seems spiral
Hmm, again an interesting-looking galaxy, but perhaps not the host:
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST contours derived from FITS files produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image (ARG0000hsx; J2000).Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002znm bent-looking doublelobe, irregular host galaxy
Not quite sure what to make of this one ...
Over in the comments, DocR wrote (May 19 2014 11:14 AM):
There are starting to be enough of these not-red-dead that we scientists need to think about how to assemble a well defined sample to study.
<>
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST contours derived from FITS file produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image (ARG0002znm; J2000).Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
In order to be sure the overlay images I create can be easily found and associated with the ARG object [1],
I'm going to createI have created separate Talk threads for each. Theywill all beare all in the Science -> The Objects sections.If I add anything, after I've copied the post over into the new thread (or added to an existing one), I'll note that. But only in the dedicated thread, not here.
The OP of this thread can serve as a master list; perhaps, WizardHowl, you could update it as I post overlays? And also add to it as you find other interesting targets? If the latter, could you please indicate a) when they were added, and b) that they are additions?
[1] at least by me! I find that once at v2 Talk thread is over one page long, it becomes time-consuming and frustrating to find anything on it!
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
Additional ARG images/objects I've done (I'll edit this post as I get more done):
- ARG0002da8 - doublelobe, is host the disk galaxy?
- ARG0001gr4 corejet or two compact sources? nearby disk galaxy (ETA: z_sp added to image)
- ARG0001at4 possibly hybrid, optical candidate for host is faint, slightly irregular
- ARG0000d99 hourglassplume, which is the host galaxy?
- ARG0002ool small triple, host obscured by star in IR, is it disk-like galaxy?
- ARG0002g0s one or two radio galaxies? one clearly disk-like (ETA: z_sp added to image)
- ARG0001vwu messy emission, is host disk or background source?
- ARG0000ava doublelobe, is host lenticular?
- ARG0002ozz hourglass, is host a disk galaxy, or even a star, or background?
- ARG0002j29 two disk galaxies? star formation or corejets? (image includes z_sp of likely host)
- ARG0003o4w complicated emission, even more so in NVSS, possibly Xshaped?
- ARG0003q2w hourglass, is host spiral? on boundary between SDSS observations?
- ARG000150p - hourglass, odd host, or is it a background source? (image includes z_ph of suggested host)
Still
four three twostill one to go,but I'm going to take a break from these, and do some othersback from the break, but ... (will finish later)ETA (17 July): where there's an obvious host, I've added the redshift onto the image, per ivywong's suggestion (below), and noted this in the above list.
Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin
These are excellent overlays Jean. Well Done! If it's not too much work, do you mind sticking the SDSS redshift onto the postage stamps as well?
Keep up the good work!
IvyPosted
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by JeanTate in response to ivywong's comment.
Thanks Ivy.
do you mind sticking the SDSS redshift onto the postage stamps as well?
I don't mind at all, and it's a great idea! Of course, I can only do that if just one candidate host has been identified. And is in the center of the image (while I may be able to add cross-hairs - what's the technical term? - and an ID, so making it clear which object the candidate is, I think the image would become rather too busy).
May not be for a few more days, however; dealing with the unannounced shutdown of the Galaxy Zoo forum is more important (to me), and it's very time-consuming. 😦
Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin
No worries. There is no rush, please take your time.
Yes, the caveats are all as you described 😃.. but for the well-IDed sources, this will then be quite useful for working out the physical scale of the jets/distance of hot spots etc 😃
Posted
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by JeanTate
Just posted an example, here:
It's not centered on the (very likely) host; rather, the ARG image center (the two differ, but at this scale likely less than a pixel). That's fairly easy to adjust for.
Is this the sort of thing you had in mind, ivywong?
Boilerplate: SDSS image per
http://skyservice.pha.jhu.edu/DR10/ImgCutout/getjpeg.aspx
, FIRST (red) and NVSS (cyan) contours derived from FITS files produced using SkyView with Python code described in this RGZ Talk thread. Image center per the ARG image (ARG0003f5p; J2000.0). "z_sp" is the SDSS spectroscopic redshift of the galaxy in the center.Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin
Yes, this is excellent! So from just quickly looking at the above image, I'd estimate that 2 hot spots are at separations of ~12 arcmin (just by visual inspection). At z~0.4 (distance ~150 Mpc), this means that these 2 hotspots are around 0.5 Mpc apart. So as you can see, one can work out the rough size of these things quite easily just by having easy acces to the redshift.
Thanks Jean!
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to ivywong's comment.
Cool! Thanks.
To be even more useful, I guess I should make the scale bar a bit bigger, 5' say; maybe I'll make it in steps of ~3: 10', 3', 1', 20", 5". Also, perhaps I should work on creating an attached table/figure, with the name of the FIRST and SDSS sources (as appropriate) in/near the center ... zoomed out like this, it's not clear which sources are actually at the center, even though the coords of the center are given to four places. Putting this on the image itself would be too much.
What do you think?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
How about this one?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00024od
Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin
@JeanTate: Sorry for the slight delay in this reply. I was observing (long shifts) and am getting back into the land of the living again. You're certainly right with your new suggestions for making the scale bar bigger etc but for the most part, I do think that we are to get much of the science out with your current configuration 😃
Just my 2-cents ... 😃 Overall still very good work !
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
DONE: ARG00024od - what's going on here?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd in response to JeanTate's comment.
Thanks! the image is superb!
Can I ask you to do an image of SDSS J163657.18+214016.9?
first post from this thread
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
You're very welcome! 😄
I've added it to my list; first thing I'll do is try to find the ARG ID of a FIRST source at (or near) the center. Unless you already know such a thing? 😉
Here's a question I've been pondering: for me these explorations are quite enough fun in and of themselves; however, I wonder to what extent they have scientific value, as in if we were some faculty member's PhD students, or postdocs, would our mentor/supervisor/etc think we were simply wasting time? I strongly suspect not, but do know really know how much our fun is like what real PhD students/postdocs/etc do. Do you?
Posted
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by WizardHowl in response to JeanTate's comment.
An academic project, even a complete PhD, will have a core 'research question' as its central focus, although there can still be the flexibility to explore other questions that arise during those studies. A key difference between a professional and amateur investigation is that for professional astronomers (including postgrad students) the objective is to produce something publishable, preferably a paper in a mainstream journal. Astronomers also do a lot of surveys where they are collecting objects of a certain type (e.g. many of the references for RGZ objects of interest in NED are radio surveys listing all sources in certain parts of the sky) and these are very useful/essential for future studies.
What RGZ is trying to do is to link radio sources in FIRST with IR sources in WISE band 1, which is much easier for people to do than current AI. Numerous other projects/research questions can then be addressed that are not otherwise possible - I imagine that professors and senior lecturers may already be in the process of trying to get some of these projects funded as opportunities for PhD projects or for postdoctoral research. In this context, it can be hard for users to be aware of the real scientific value of their observations but trying to identify the host galaxies of unusually shaped regions of radio emission is a part of the key goal for RGZ so is most definitely not wasting time 😃 Keep up the good work!
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Details in 1637+2140 - triple?
Posted
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by WizardHowl
I would like to suggest http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000iuy for an overlay. As noted initially by antikodon, the emission is messy but to my eye there look to be two galaxies that might be a source of some of the emission: SDSS J130300.80+511954.7 Z_ph~0.14 which is clearly a disk and SDSS J130255.82+511944.6 Z_ph~0.11-0.13 which looks like a barred galaxy.
In either case, an overlay might help ascertain where the emission is coming from: a wat from a disk galaxy is not something I would have thought possible! (Since a fragile disk would be shredded if it were moving through an IGM capable of bending ultra-relativistic jets to that extent). Even if these are two hourglass/doublelobes, one of them has a very odd radio morphology and there seems to be a radio bridge between them.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
How about
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002y8z
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
ARG0000iuy - one host a disk galaxy?
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Possible gravitational lensing?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Hi Jean, can you look at this
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00015lf
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG00015lf - star-forming spiral with extended NVSS emission?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001fbj
and
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001wdx
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0001fbj - a rather large double lobe?
and
ARG0001wdx - asymmetric bent triple?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Most likely hourglass associated with distant ETG, but I think worth too look at overlay
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00021ba
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG00021ba - corejet? hourglass? triple??
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003413
Posted
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by WizardHowl
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002jwv suspect host is really a background source, the optical galaxy seems like it is only a fragment of a galaxy merger
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Maybe unusual (well, for me ) red host
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00031zt
Source seems is behind star?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002hae
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0003413 - what do you think the host is?
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Maybe unusual (well, for me ) red host http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00031zt
Maybe SDSS J210538.69+101839.8 is not a STAR, or perhaps is not the host?
Source seems is behind star? http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002hae
STAR SDSS J164137.73+175748.4 is certainly not the host of the #hourglass, but whatever is it's invisible in SDSS (and drowned out in WISE):
The images in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The objects at the centers of the images are SDSS J210538.69+101839.8 (top), and SDSS J164137.73+175748.4 (bottom).
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to WizardHowl's comment.
ARG0002jwv - Star Wars purple light sabre? No, but what's the host? radio morphology?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00008v4
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG00008v4 - double lobe with 'local' SBc host? Also, WISE offset??
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd in response to JeanTate's comment.
Thanks for your work Jean!
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000k1z
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0000k1z - how many hosts? what kinds of radio emission?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000etr
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002l5k
and
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00019jg
and
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001se5
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0002l5k - is the host SDSS J140509.56+161550.1? or SDSS J140509.80+161609.8?
ARG00019jg - a messy field
ARG0001se5 - how to describe the radio morphology, nat?
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0000etr - host is a blue elliptical?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000vkn
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000350h
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001u6l
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0000vkn - what's the host? Perhaps there's two??
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG000350h - one host (doublelobe), or two (~compact)?
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Dunno, maybe host is ETG, hard to judge
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001g0g
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Another one
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002ko5
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0001g0g - An SDRAGN candidate, methinks, and a huge one to boot:
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J162415.74+345114.0.
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0002ko5 - One of the better SDRAGN candidates discovered, so far (IMHO):
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J095605.87+162829.9.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Thanks for your work Jean!
Here is another interesting case, likely emission from background source but looks interesting
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000jox
And
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00036fu
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Nvss / first overlay
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001d93
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0000jox - There's no doubt that SDSS J164352.79+505349.6 is an M5III star in our own galaxy; however, it does rather seem to be the host of this nice doublelobe:
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J164352.79+505349.6
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG0001d93 - Perhaps two, unrelated, hosts, each with extensive (and extended) radio emission? The center of this image is SDSS J163522.54+360804.9; the other possible (now dead?) host is at the neck of the NVSS hourglass, z_ph 0.16 SDSS J163521.23+360733.2
Perhaps zooming out even futher might help?
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J163522.54+360804.9
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
ARG00036fu - If z_ph 0.24 SDSS J091523.47+084737.7 is the host, it's a most unusual one!
#green? A faint Eos with a very bright nuclear radio source?
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J091523.47+084737.7.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
What is interesting about ARG0001d93, is there a little appendix?
Is it real?
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
I think host is IR only
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002fi2
Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin
@DolorousEdd, nice screenshot. Yes, confusion can definitely happen for high-z sources in the infrared. I concur with your analysis.
Posted
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by ivywong scientist, admin in response to JeanTate's comment.
I suspect that the double lobes are background sources.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
Maybe double with green host
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001iiu
Edit*
And hourglass
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002nij
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
I agree.
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J163542.90+184629.7.
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Yep, very strange host:
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J111126.55+333913.9.
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Impossible to say, IMHO:
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J103943.34+151604.7.
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
I think host is either Eos looking galaxy or very distant z_sp = 6!! QSO
Good overlay will be helpful
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000blq
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
What do you think Jean? A dud again?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002m6t
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
NED gives SDSS J104939.03+154837.2 as the high-z object, not SDSS J104939.35+154837.6:
There's no SDSS spectrum, and the NED source (2009ApJS..180...67R) which identifies it as a z=4.025 QSO does so photometrically. It's astonishingly bright if it is indeed at z~4!! 😮
And even SDSS J104939.35+154837.6 is really bright.
The SDSS spectroscopic pipeline messed up, big time, in giving it a spectral class of K3Iab; I suspect it latched onto the Ca and Na absorption lines and forgot about the continuum ... the absorption lines are, I think, due to local gas (i.e. in our own MW). The rising-into-the-UV is characteristic of QSOs; the featurelessness, of blazars.
Like all featureless blue blazar spectra, if there are no lines, you can't really work out the redshift. To my eye, there's only one obvious emission line, at ~449.4 nm; if it's intrinsic, how do you decide what it's due to?
Positional match? Overlay coming up (though not today)!
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
What do you think Jean?
HUDS and SDRAGN candidate? or it is ETG say E5 or E6 ( more than half GZ volunteers say so
0.613 Fraction of votes for Elliptical category
)
Classification from Galaxy Zoo 1
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00010x3
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
Thanks Dolorous Edd! 😄
Yes, it's certainly a Huds candidate, and not much doubt that it's a nice #triple.
Back when I was hunting Huds enthusiastically, I ended up with ~1-2k candidates; from memory I'd've pigeonholed this one more as a 'late merger' than an obvious Eos ... to me it's rather too messy and asymmetric to be a 'pure' edge-on (or highly inclined) disk galaxy. Not that that makes it any less interesing, of course, and the fact that you have found this example surely means that there are at least a dozen others ...
Posted
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by Dolorous_Edd
What do you think Jean
A lenticular candidate?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000354q
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
In ARG0002m6t:
Not much doubt as to which object is the host of the very radio-bright #compact, eh?
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J104939.35+154837.6
Posted
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by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
In ARG00010x3:
That's not an elliptical, in my book ... rather a disk galaxy with a very big bulge, viewed almost edge-on (note the 'pointy ends'; no elliptical has those!).
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J112818.03+422722.8
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
In ARG000354q:
Perhaps not a lenticular, but certainly a disk galaxy ('spiral'), with double lobes ... an SDRAGN! 😃
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J125652.34+091538.9
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
In ARG0000blq:
As has been pointed out, the SDSS spectroscopic pipeline's estimate of redshift is WRONG ... it identified the main - broad - line as Lyman-alpha, but it's Balmer-alpha, so the redshift is ~0.357.
But is SDSS J160932.70+552542.0 the host? And is the 'red fluff' to the N real? If so, what is it?
The image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk post. The object at the center of the image is SDSS J160932.70+552542.0.
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Jean is that a gravitational lense? looks like a merger with some sort of arc, I know it is hard to say thanks to the redshift, but nonetheless looks like smilie face 😃
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00029e1
Posted
-
by ivywong scientist, admin in response to JeanTate's comment.
Not sure if this fits in with Minnie's definition of an SDRAGN since the spiral arms aren't visible.....
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ivywong's comment.
Yeah ... I find the distinction between 'disk galaxy with obvious spiral arms' and 'disk galaxy' to be pretty artificial; for example, an edge-on spiral galaxy has no visible spiral arms, but is nonetheless a spiral galaxy. Likewise, a face-on flocculent spiral at quite modest redshift will have no visible spiral arms.
A more interesting distinction may be 'lenticular' vs 'non-lenticular disk galaxy', but lenticulars with large DLs are just as rare as SDRAGNs (there's only one clear example in the literature, that I know of, one of Julie's faves).
Posted
-
by ivywong scientist, admin
Yes, that is true. However to understand why Minnie is specifically looking for arms is that she is looking for strong evidence against the theory that luminous radio destroys the spiral structure. So it all depends on the science that one is after.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ivywong's comment.
@Ivy: ah, thanks very much for that! I hadn't realized that that was the hypothesis being tested ...
Posted
-
by JeanTate
I've just posted 50 overlay contour images, and have another three to do.
It took me pretty much a whole day to do this, with the vast majority of the time spent on posting into RGZ Talk. That's horrendously inefficient, even given the complexity of some of the fields; not something I intend to do again. I will, however, post to single threads (I have, for example, the results of my first two systematic searches for #SDRAGN candidates to post into the Hourglass sources associated with spiral galaxies thread), and will certainly consider individual fields/objects which my fellow zooites may choose to post to this thread.
What about giants? Well, I think Dolorous Edd has that topic very well covered, but if he'd like some help ... 😉
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002dmk, per Talk thread
ARG0000omq
ARG0002foj
ARG0001csu
ARG000150l
ARG0003dx5
ARG0000dsz - SE DL
ARG0001fdb - E triple, NW almost triple
ARG00034gr
ARG0001n5q
ARG000033k
ARG0002bln
ARG000322u
ARG0001gea
ARG00018a6
ARG0003el5
ARG0003g3q
ARG00038pa
ARG00010gk
ARG000298g
ARG0002oew
ARG0001va2
ARG0001ym9Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Perhaps an overlay will make things clear
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001ws9
And about giants
What about giants? Well, I think Dolorous Edd has that topic very well covered, but if he'd like some help ... 😉
I certainly do, mostly logistical
It is hard to keep track of all comments with #overedge hashtag, so If you spot what you think is a good candidate
You can do follow-up by yourself or drop me a line and I will cover the restPosted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous Edd's comment.
I certainly do, mostly logistical
It is hard to keep track of all comments with #overedge hashtag, so If you spot what you think is a good candidate You can do follow-up by yourself or drop me a line and I will cover the rest
No worries. Have you considered creating a hashtag group for #overedge? With that you get all the fields which have this tag (in Comments), and from that you can create your own Collection(s), and/or a new hashtag (e.g. #giantcand) and also a new hashtag group. The beauty of hashtag groups is that they automatically capture all such tags; the downside is that they have their own logic as to order, and there's no way to tell - short of going through every page! - which are new since your last check.
Posted
-
by zutopian
Image: http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000mwd
Discussion: http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000002/discussions/DRG0000cpg
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG000137x - what's the host?
ARG0002szkPosted
-
by JeanTate
With the exception of a few zoom-in/zoom-outs, I'm now all caught up! 😃
Anyone have any new suggestions for contour overlays?
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0001v30 - zoom waaaay out Done
ARG00020zx - SDRAGN candidate Done
ARG00026dk Done
ARG00023hz Done
ARG0002nim - several hosts Done
ARG0002ehh - 2 hosts? Done
ARG000363e - N compact Done
ARG0000xk2 - zoom out Done
ARG0003crc - SDRAGN candidate Done
ARG0001b8t - SDRAGN candidate
ARG0001vgk - SDRAGN candidate
ARG0001u87 Done
ARG0001l17 Done
ARG0000q5w Done
ARG00036w1 - SDRAGN candidate
ARG0003czz Done
ARG0002i2j Done
near (217.093, 30.523); large SDRAGN? radio loud Eos? Done
ARG0002968 Done
ARG0002tp3 - zoom out DonePosted
-
by sisifolibre in response to JeanTate's comment.
Anyone have any new suggestions for contour overlays?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001c6u
J133427.23+363834.7? a #green?worth?
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
Yes! 😃
Any more?
NOTE: I process these in batch mode, and so I usually wait until there's ~20+ 'pending'; this can take some time ...
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
what do you think? it might be interesting? have not quite clear what sources
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000b7g
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
Well worth doing an overlay; I've added it to the list ... 😃
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Jean. Could you add ARG0002sl1 to your next batch with the overedge emission. Interested to see what the possible host is.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Certainly; will do! 😃
Anyone else have any they'd like to see an overlay done for?
Posted
-
by JeanTate
From super-zooite wtaskew, over in GZ Talk (link), an interesting radio source (host is an AGN), at ~(237.248, 8.910).
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd in response to JeanTate's comment.
It also was in RGZ
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003643
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
Done.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
Done.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Done.
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
thanks @JeanTate, great job!
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0000nwj - SDRAGN candidate (NVSS) Done (first one anyway)
ARG0003bny - hosts? Done
ARG0002dui - SDRAGN candidate Done
ARG0002254 - host? Done
ARG00017e7 - triple? (NVSS) Done
ARG0002d6d - green plume Done
ARG00008i0 - green plume, SDRAGN candidate Done
ARG0000z7n - strange morphology Done
ARG0002dc4 - strange morphology DonePosted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002uff
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
if worth:
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001k1bPosted
-
by sisifolibre
About my last post here.... now I make my overlaids! I am learning to use Aladin like Dolorous Edd... they aren't so detaled like yours but i'm trying 😃.
Red circles are AllWISE sources, blue circles are SDSS sources
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
That's very cool sisifolibre, such a wonderful Xmas pressie (as they say DownUnder)!
I'm still taking 'orders', especially for cases for which these Aladin-derived overlays may not be as good at identifying hosts or morphology.
Here's one:ARG0001vpc - SDRAGN candidate Done
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
SDRAGN candidate?
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00036xu
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Most likely an overlap, but worth to check
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000wur
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Hi Jean,
Could this one go with the next lot of overlays.
http://skyserver.sdss.org/dr12/en/tools/chart/navi.aspx?ra=195.758&dec=51.32380555555556&scale=0.2
Posted
-
by antikodon in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000002/discussions/DRG00007jw
Posted
-
by JeanTate
Update: I hope to do contour overlays for all outstanding requests some time tomorrow (Mon, 11 Jan). If you have any you've been 'saving', please note them now! 😃
Posted
-
by JeanTate
SDRAGN candidate ARG00000gj, host SDSS J120603.08+635731.4
Done (p27)
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Will add this one also.
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy in response to antikodon's comment.
Thanks for the reference of the overlay antikodon. Jean you can disregard ARG0000ivk.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Done.
For contour overlay images I have previously used Google Photo, Google Drive, and Dropbox. However, none of those now seems to allow the copy/pasting of an image! 😦 This one is from Shutterfly, and is clearly quite inferior. If anyone has a recommendation for a free image upload&share site ...
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
Done.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
Done.
Posted
-
by JeanTate
Dolorous Edd recommended Imgur, and it seems to work just fine; thanks DE! 😃
Posting of contour overlay images to resume shortly ...
Posted
-
by c_cld
see post 3 months ago by KWillett ADMIN, SCIENTIST "posting images" http://talk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BGZ0000003/discussions/DGZ0001lcm
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to c_cld's comment.
Thanks c_cld, I seem to have not seen that GZ Talk post (I hang out there much less than I used to).
I've ~a dozen or so images/fields yet to process or post; probably tomorrow.
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0000e77: complex #wat
Done (p2)
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to sisifolibre's comment.
Done (first pass)
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
I've ~a dozen or so images/fields yet to process or post; probably tomorrow.
All done now; however, there are some more to do, based on what the ones I've posted. They have to do with these fields: ARG0001k1b, ARG0002356/ARG0002359, ARG00036xu, and ARG0000nwj.
Not sure when I'll do those, may be several weeks' time 😦 So, in the meantime, any more requests? Also, did I miss any request (I think I got them all, but am not 100% sure).
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
Done (first pass anyway)
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002c2w host?
ARG0000c51 host(s)?
ARG00033yt IFRS?
ARG000153g host?
ARG0003hsh hosts?
ARG0001q8q show the overlapping radio contours
ARG0003oz4 host?
ARG0002eo6 host?
ARG0000fjr pretty
ARG0002saa host?
ARG0000pi8 host?
ARG0003m9k SDRAGN candidate
ARG0001kga SDRAGN candidate
ARG000135y SDRAGN candidate
ARG0002nkx strange morphologies; hosts?
ARG0000yx3 go wide, to W; strange set of sources? hosts?
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Jean,
Can you add this one to the next batch.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Will do.
Anyone else have any suggestions?
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00016ui
Posted
-
by JeanTate
"noIR but SDSS source" fields to check; see this thread for details.
Good:
ARG0001jvg
ARG0000xo6
ARG00033y3
ARG0001khv
ARG00020l8
ARG0000zut
ARG0002myp
ARG0001ek3
ARG0001uir
ARG0000pi8
Fair:
ARG0000lpn
ARG0002yyk
ARG0002fnp
ARG0002ktp
ARG00011ix
ARG00016uw
ARG0002oc9
ARG00028va
ARG0002w3n
ARG0003fsj
ARG0003h1m
ARG0002hau
ARG0003869
ARG0001vfp
ARG00039kq
ARG0003a3z
ARG0002amu
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000fid
Also
http://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001uqc
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0000tsw - host is unlikely to be zsp 0.507 SDSS J080339.89+454552.6 1237651495221265069
ARG0001gxb - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J165209.53+342317.5
ARG00013kx - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J170953.87+410503.8
ARG0002d4a - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J092929.50+195349.7
ARG0000hdx - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J075529.95+520450.6Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
SDSS J084759.90+124159.3 looks interesting
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002u1a
Edit*
and
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00022pl
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0000mpl - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J081902.03+491739.9
ARG0001oh0 - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J150326.21+304817.1
ARG00030mv - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J110007.48+104304.0
ARG00038i2 - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J220618.83+080426.3Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Can this be added to the list, #wat.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Sure it can! 😃 Added.
New:
ARG0001h56 - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J135922.56+341851.6 (or nbr)
ARG0000tc4 - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J102444.01+460011.4
ARG0003pli - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J003559.58+020113.1
ARG0002grh - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J131124.84+181110.0?
ARG0000rpv - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J110257.86+464805.6
ARG0003mjx - aligned with blue fluff?, host SDSS J085741.89+031128.7
ARG0003niz - sole host SDSS J093233.56+024849.5?
ARG0002trz - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J091558.36+124601.7 add NVSS contours
ARG0002am3 - wow! host SDSS J144920.23+210522.7
ARG00003g6 - bright QSO host? SDSS J140256.59+611417.3
ARG0000j5u - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J085709.05+511041.7
ARG0003fjb - weird orthogonal double doubelobe? in SDSS footprint but no PO host E at ~(217.0708, 5.6018)? add NVSS contours UPDATE: in DR7 SDSS J142817.00+053606.7
ARG0001w5k - host? SDSS J142646.42+271223.3
ARG0000f1f - artifact? outside SDSS footprint; use POSS
ARG0001xrn - not SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J112857.67+262814.7
ARG0003pix - SDRAGN candidate, host SDSS J021054.06+020304.9
ARG000397a - 2 weird hosts SDSS J151102.15+075049.5 and SDSS J151059.77+075146.2?Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
ARG0002u1a contour overlay image posted here.
ARG00022pl, centered on zsp 0.502 SDSS J075802.19+242219.5:
all fracDeV's are 1, so consistent with the host being an elliptical.
The contour overlay image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk thread.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
ARG0001uqc, centered on zsp 0.030 SDSS J114522.37+275108.6:
ARG0000fid still on order.
The contour overlay image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk thread.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to ChrisMolloy's comment.
Centered on STAR SDSS J082906.27+531123.8:
What is (are) the host(s)? Is this a #triple, with the NE lobe connected to the (#nooptical) host via a #jet?
The contour overlay image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk thread.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
ARG0000fid still on order.
Here it is, centered on zph 0.066±0.030 SDSS J123215.85+530441.1:
Judging from thes FIRST and NVSS cutouts, zooming out further is warranted, right?
The contour overlay image in this post was created from sources, and using methods, described in this RGZ Talk thread.
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy in response to JeanTate's comment.
ARG0000fe6 could be a #triple, but I'd go more for a #doublelobe with the nearest host being ALLWISE J082906.06+531114.9. There is a faint object at that location but no SDSS data. I also ran with the NED reference for SDSS J082906.27+531123.8. However, could also be #ifrs if #triple.
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
They're now all done. As are all other requests, as of today; except for one zoomed-further-out overlay (ARG0000fid). Oh, and some of the "noIR but there's an SDSS host" candidates.
I've described how I created these contour overlay images in the I'm thinking of making the 'FIRST contour overlay' Python code I wrote available to any zooite ... thread. Please post your feedback on that, and any of your own experiences creating such images, there.
Any new suggestions for contour overlay images?
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to JeanTate's comment.
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002kmq; SDSS J152256.44+162819.9 (1237667735601610882); 0.096±0.036; 230.7352, 16.4722
Weird and wonderful: ARG0003bqf; SDSS J025625.37+065622.4 (1237670017271988455); 0.120±0.012
Green optical but noIR host: ARG000124e; SDSS J131512.88+415016.4 (1237661967434580508); STAR
Overlapping triples; 2 hosts?: ARG0000u0s; outside SDSS footprint
What's the hourglass host?: ARG0000e3x; not SDSS J133106.87+371458.1 (1237664854713106657); zsp 0.056
SDRAGN cand: ARG0000oug; SDSS J091902.22+261611.9 (1237665128526643233); 0.025±0.008; 139.7593, 26.2700
terrific EELR: ARG0001y7n; SDSS J133817.77+481641.0 (1237665128526643233); 0.028; 204.5741, 48.2781
SDRAGN cand: ARG0000u0e; SDSS J084710.57+454025.6 (1237655107826221363); 0.301±0.046; 131.7941, 45.6738
strange green host?: ARG0002ovk; SDSS J215433.46+144348.7 (1237680092719481794); 0.265±0.104; 328.6395, 14.7302
SDRAGN cand: ARG0003848; SDSS J120204.64+081240.8 (1237674598925074712); 0.146±0.036; 180.5194, 8.2113
SDRAGN green cand: ARG0000c3q; SDSS J135835.51+550643.5 (1237674598925074712); 0.361±0.086; 209.6480, 55.1121
'strike-slip' lobes: ARG0001h6b; SDSS J164949.44+341800.2 (1237655471823716815); STAR; 252.4560, 34.3001
#noIR but SDSS host: ARG0001f81; SDSS J153436.27+351222.2 (1237661463838131124); STAR; 233.6511, 35.2062
Not needed; already done SDRAGN cand: ARG00025v2; SDSS J120110.64+230519.2 (1237667736117575852); 0.049; 180.2944, 23.0887 DONE
giant cand: ARG0003kjs; SDSS J110003.35+035708.5 (1237654600496185521); STAR?
SDRAGN cand: ARG0003cm3; SDSS J145906.94+063559.8 (1237662268609528012); 0.378±0.030; 224.7789, 6.6000
SDRAGN cand: ARG0001kq6; SDSS J121936.54+323557.6 (1237665330389189130); 0.314±0.062; 184.9023, 32.5994
green outflow: ARG0002u9m; SDSS J112110.09+123604.4 (1237661813342339485); 0.469±0.055; 170.2921, 12.6012
#noIR but SDSS host: ARG0001dnh; SDSS J081657.40+355622.4 (1237674368069010242); 0.457±0.045;124.2392, 35.9396
2 WATs: ARG000223y; 127.1690, 24.6183
#noIR but SDSS host?: ARG0001r8j; SDSS J084621.28+292937.3 (1237661126151832640); 0.088±0.087; 131.5887, 29.493
#noIR but SDSS host?: ARG0002955; SDSS J105016.40+214500.0 (1237667736110367353); 0.750±0.177; 162.5684, 21.7500
SDRAGN cand: ARG0001v39; SDSS J121613.00+274142.0 (1237667323256635979); 0.395; 184.0542, 27.6950Posted
-
by JeanTate
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002g5w; SDSS J113039.83+182637.0 (1237668292300701706); 0.042; 172.6660, 18.4436
#faintIR SDSS host: ARG000254r; SDSS J074119.00+232325.2 (1237657628429452649); 0.263±0.114; 115.3292, 23.3903
SDRAGN cand: ARG0000qt2; SDSS J125217.34+471549.1 (1237661357546799246); 0.132±0.032; 193.0723, 47.2637
#noIR SDSS host: ARG0001ahs; SDSS J094126.94+373358.7 (1237661850919240663); 0.386±0.147; 145.3623, 37.5663
SDRAGN cand: ARG0001gb7; SDSS J150319.58+344210.4 (1237662194540740876); 0.361; 225.8316, 34.7029
WaW: ARG0001cnt; SDSS J135912.16+362448.0 (1237662661594252322); 0.317±0.186; 209.8007, 36.4133
SDRAGN cand: ARG00014r3; SDSS J164519.71+403100.7 (1237655502958100748); 0.096±0.032; 251.3322, 40.5169
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002t8g; SDSS J113648.57+125239.7 (1237661813343977617); 0.034; 174.2024, 12.8777
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002nez; SDSS J105743.81+151740.3 (1237664133167054896); 0.053±0.015; 164.4326, 15.2945
triple, or restarted?: ARG0003ekd; SDSS J153439.92+055617.4 (1237662262714368339); 0.241; 233.6664, 5.9382
SDRAGN cand: ARG0001cl7; SDSS J122118.88+362546.7 (1237664671638618349); 0.393±0.028; 185.3287, 36.4296
SDRAGN cand: ARG00011nr; SDSS J085549.15+420420.1 (1237657118412833075); 0.238±0.036; 133.9548, 42.0723
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002o33; SDSS J083350.03+150122.9 (1237667538534924479); 0.122; 128.4585, 15.0230
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002o33; SDSS J141613.36+021907.8 (1237651754025222197); 0.158; 214.0557, 2.3188Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002m54
Posted
-
by JeanTate
EELR: ARG0001b1q; SDSS J161647.31+371621.2 (1237659161202852026); 0.152; 244.1972, 37.2726
host(s)?: ARG0003bcu; SDSS J084600.36+070424.6 (1237661064408334414); 0.342; 131.5015, 7.0735
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002ahv; SDSS J151338.41+210738.5 (1237665532254748808); 0.079; 228.4101, 21.1274
SDRAGN cand: ARG0003qiu; SDSS J025145.38+014118.2 (1237678618510360788); 0.182±0.036; 42.9391, 1.6884
Zoom out ARG0003d3f; SDRAGN cand SDSS J121124.78+062531.9 (1237661970110873874); 0.312±0.124; 182.8533, 6.4255; and strange NW FIRST radio emission
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002i2c; SDSS J154220.23+173754.0 (1237665567689606140); 0.656±0.063; 235.5843, 17.6317
SDRAGN cand: ARG00007ys; SDSS J141318.87+574531.5 (1237659146706027062); 0.61±0.051; 213.3286, 57.7588
SDRAGN cand: ARG0002geb; SDSS J120050.14+182118.1 (1237668496857432366); 0.472; 180.2089, 18.3550
weird host: ARG0001j84; SDSS J074545.66+331732.6 (1237674289681138592); 0.126; 116.4403, 33.2924Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002v4f
One of the components overlap with SDSS J005935.63+122120.4
Posted
-
by JeanTate
SDRAGN cand: ARG0003ovk; SDSS J143101.44+021812.8 (1237651754026860965); 0.249±0.059; 217.7560, 2.3036
SDRAGN cand: ARG0003gq3; SDSS J144528.33+051459.6 (1237654881813528922); 0.712±0.144; 221.3681, 5.2499
what's the host?: ARG000219z; maybe SDSS J092357.00+245705.2 (1237667142867485334); 0.441; 140.9875, 24.9514
SDRAGN cand: ARG00034ii; SDSS J005027.57+092719.9 (1237654881813528922); 0.457±0.100; 12.6149, 9.4555Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Maybe straightforward case with a twist: https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003dea
1 scenario: one-sided source with SDSS J230428.29+062008.3 - 1237669516898926813
2 scenario: hourglass with host non PO green object to the WS from SDSS J230428.29+062008.3 ( cosmic ray hit? )
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Possible SDRAGN candidate?
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001v5x
SDSS J145643.71+273917.9 - 1237665127485079721
Posted
-
by JeanTate
Giant? ARG0000nwn and ARG0000nw2 host possibly SDSS J105709.25+484040.9
SDRAGN cand ARG0003gla; SDSS J151659.24+051751.5 (1237662267537817621); 0.051; 229.2468, 5.2976Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Maybe SDRAGN candidate?
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00016g7
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Only interesting because I rarely see possible wats with IR only host
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00003m3
Can be skipped
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000tx0
Host could be
SDSS J134900.13+454256.5 - 1237661434851950898
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00038ms
and
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001lw2
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
ARG00032t1 - https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00032t1
Possible host
SDSS J114512.72+100334.6 - 1237658492814622858
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Likely overlap
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001712
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Host could be a star
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00003n0
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Host could be spectroscopic star
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001c9x
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003ev9 bent triple? Three separate sources? Something else?
Host possibly SDSS J080842.90+055043.7
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
I think all the contour overlays are up to date. So if there are any new ones that anyone wants feel free to post further suggestions here.
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003k86
Posted
-
by JeanTate
Many of these already have overlays, but I'd like to suggest (some) additional one(s). Several also already have their own Discussion threads.
ARG0003niz: WISE and FIRST overlays
ARG00021ed: FIRST and NVSS?
ARG0000e8b/NGC2656: FIRST; one host? more?
ARG0003bny: WISE and FIRST, with contour intervals SQRT(3) or perhaps 2
ARG0000eva: FIRST, and WISE?
ARG0000yz2: FIRST(more later)
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002h95: what is the host of the #double? Is there an #offset (host not on line connecting lobes)?
ARG00000k2: FIRST on DSS; hosts?
ARG0001e75: FIRST, but centered on the host, SDSS J172109.49+354216.0
ARG0001ore: FIRST
centered on (162.599, 30.654): FIRST
ARG0003mlh: one host? or two?
ARG00014as: FIRST
ARG0000s67: FIRST(now finished pp1-3 of How to describe the radio morphology?)
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0001llw: host(s)?
ARG0000e2u: host(s)?
ARG0003qsx: FIRST and NVSS, perhaps zoomed out; host(s)?
ARG0000hhc: FIRST
ARG00038fj: host(s)?
ARG00011k9: extremely asymmetric triple
ARG00031lm, but centered on SDSS J100449.29+102543.9
ARG0003qfr: FIRST
ARG0002s11, centered on SDSS J153703.62+132808.3
ARG0003awn: FIRST, NVSS, and TGSS or VLSSr(that takes me to the end of p4)
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0003kz0: FIRST and NVSS; is SDSS J095853.77+034520.7 the host?
ARG0000fcc: host(s)?Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG00018eu: FIRST and WISE; what are the hosts?
ARG00026wa: ditto
ARG00021hg: ditto
ARG0003q8g: ditto, go wide (5.4'x5.4')
ARG00030q7: FIRST (cool source!)
ARG0001vh3: FIRST, to show #slipstrike #double morphology
centered on SDSS J150148.34+434632.5: FIRST and NVSS
ARG000070k: FIRST
ARG0000qu0: FIRST, host(s)?
ARG0000te0: FIRST
ARG00020hu: FIRST(~3/4 finished with p5)
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002ff7, SDSS J083224.82+184855.4, maybe SDRAGN?
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Possible SDRAGN candidate
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002gi4
Posted
-
by JeanTate
Interesting objects, posted by A1001, in ARG00015tw
Ditto, in ARG0000b6n
One more, ARG0001aldPosted
-
by JeanTate
Another interesting one from A1001, in ARG0000hv6
And a second one: ARG0003ajePosted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002k7l: radio emission follows the red and green blobs near the host (SDSS J114312.27+164139.2)?
ARG00013tp: SW radio source, host SDSS J095408.05+405633.1; what's the radio morphology wrt the host?
ARG0002sq4: hosts?Posted
-
by JeanTate
Some catching up (will be edited to add more):
ARG0001txo: host(s)?
ARG00039mf: #hourglass host?
ARG0000kam: host?
ARG0003bq9: host?
ARG0001b97: host?
ARG0002g3b: host(s)?
ARG0002o2z: strange host SDSS J082045.95+150223.4?
ARG0003147: #SDRAGN cand SDSS J135947.35+103318.4
ARG0002uaw: ditto, SDSS J160845.75+123534.9
ARG0000fkg: weird #triplePosted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002hn3: host(s)?
ARG0002iq0: host is SDSS J153503.22+172123.0?
ARG0000m7l: host SDSS J105647.95+493339.0?
ARG00018dy: host is SDSS J073950.90+383759.2?
ARG0003dmc: unusual hostPosted
-
by c_cld
ARG0003pn0 https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003pn0 QSO B1330+022 , 3C 287.1
SDSS J133253.26+020045.6 1237651753483632869 ra, dec 203.221957727, 2.012687613 ;13:32:53.26, +02:00:45.67
z_spec 0.216 Peak flux (mJy) 339.81 ± 0.35 (FIRST )
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to c_cld's comment.
Very impressive, c_cld! 😃
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0001yag: host(s)? Maybe #green SDSS J112229.36+261331.5?
ARG00010t5: host(s)?
ARG0003fke: host(s)?
ARG0003git; host is #red #outflow SDSS J102532.44+051903.7?
ARG0002vmd: #SDRAGN host SDSS J090130.48+121158.0?
ARG0001q49; strange host, SDSS J115525.90+300255.2?Posted
-
by c_cld
Radio galaxy "3C 223.1" ( or 3C223 , '3C 223' ) "X-shaped structure"
SDSS J094124.02+394441.8 1237660343399678202
Posted
-
by ivywong scientist, admin in response to c_cld's comment.
What a stunning X-shaped source! Great overlay!
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG000086o: is #red #outflow SDSS J140539.76+573722.2 the host?
ARG0000iv1: host(s)?
ARG0001yjk: host is SDSS J151340.05+260730.4?
ARG00010ke: host SDSS J122555.21+423651.0 looks like a blue star, but SDSS says it's a galaxy
ARG0002h8n: #slipstrike
ARG0001wol: host(s)?
ARG0002h95: host?
ARG0002l9l: hosts?
ARG0003hwi: hosts?
ARG0001daz: host?
ARG00028pb: hosts?
ARG0003gym: host?
ARG0000zga: host(s)?
ARG0001h82: hosts(s)?Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0003ir2: strange morphology, strange host SDSS J100128.75+043437.2
ARG0003a8f: spectacular
ARG0001oe7: host(s)?
ARG0003193: host is STAR SDSS J152307.55+103154.7?
ARG0000kw9: is host STAR (likely QSO) SDSS J165945.35+501341.4? Interesting!
ARG0003ium: really strange radio morphology, and what is the host?!?
ARG0000wzt: overlap? x-shaped? host(s)?
ARG0001ra0: what is the host!?!
ARG0001dbq: strange morphology, host SDSS J075334.39+360637.3?
ARG0003m89: ditto, host SDSS J150332.64+031848.0
ARG00012c2: cool field!
ARG0001wa6: restarted 3 times?Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Looks like radio bridge between two sources at different redshifts, but most likely from background source
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002dcc
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0002drv: at least two hosts, #overlap
ARG0003bwl: radio-bright #double, but no apparent IR or optical host!
ARG0000srv: no apparent host? add WISE contours?
ARG0000upb: very cool, host SDSS J155806.87+451955.4
ARG0001nrb: another cool one, host SDSS J072725.06+310935.4?
ARG0003ptb: NW corner, possible host SDSS J152625.79+015732.5 is a giant mess!
ARG0002b0v: host is STAR (QSO) SDSS J165210.62+205311.7?
ARG0003cuc: odd #double, post-merger host SDSS J125724.18+063114.9Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
double host is behind the star or a star
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003box
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG00005yz: radio morphology is #double (host SDSS J085231.32+591350.3), but what a strange form!
ARG0002v74: host is Syefert SDSS J230456.64+121922.4; does radio emission extend beyond optical boundary?
ARG0003lab: host(s)?
ARG0003oan: hosts?
ARG0001bww: strange host SDSS J083048.91+364755.6
ARG0002ci9: morphology? host(s)? maybe SDSS J102901.24+201006.1
ARG0001eu8: cool environment! host SDSS J160923.20+352240.4Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
Possible SDRAGN candidate ??
Double is visible in NVSS
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001ypi
another possible candidate
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002oe3
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG000384y: strange radio morphology
ARG000206u: host of spectacular #WAT is Eos SDSS J162037.18+252051.9?
ARG0000jb4: what is the host?
ARG0001hes: which one is the host?
ARG00022mp: excellent example of a #slipstrike! host zph 0.36 SDSS J113400.18+242423.7
centered on SDSS J135110.81+072846.0: a cool #triple
ARG00037ky: host (SDSS J135647.15+082419.3?) jets were precessing in the past?
ARG0003p22: #overedge, host is SDSS J082443.68+021423.1? faint NW emission in both FIRST and NVSS
ARG0001rq8: host(s)?
ARG00012uy: hosts?
ARG0002h8q: host is SDSS J080106.96+175845.2, right?
ARG0003e16: hosts?
ARG0000a10: hosts?
ARG00026cm: cool!
ARG0003gy1: host SDSS J103938.71+051032.5, very strange radio morphology
ARG0001uoa: host(s)?
ARG0000cyo: #giant host SDSS J104632.22+543559.6?
ARG000321o: odd optical environment, inc. #green #plume host SDSS J234640.72+101706
ARG00036qs: host(s)?
ARG00006ms: host(s)?
ARG0001rql: host is SDSS J111634.61+291517.1?
ARG0001jdl: #overlap? host(s)?
ARG00039dy: host is SDSS J153447.12+074715.2?
ARG00007ee: #overlap?
ARG0000sln: host(s)?
ARG0001ipn: host(s)?
ARG0001hqf: go wide, what's the diffuse emission to the SW?
ARG000142z: what is the core of the S radio source?
ARG0003cpn: host(s)?
ARG0000e72: host(s)?
ARG00014pe: host(s)?Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0001c1m: hosts?
ARG00019bw: what is the host?
ARG00000de: host of E radio source?
ARG0000vyp: #double to E, is host STAR SDSS J112828.19+444510.3?Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
ovelap most likely, the center of the emission is a bit off
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000tnc
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG000062a: host of the S radio source?
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
to the south from https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001w1a
preferably FIRST / NVSS
A patch of diffuse emission is visible in NVSS around
SDSS J132259.87+270659.1 - 1237667323799994428
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
Add TGSS (or separately) will also be interesting ... Perhaps the SE #compact source is unrelated?
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
maybe overlap with star
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002lxd
Posted
-
by JeanTate
in ARG0000hie, is QSO SDSS J144300.59+520136.9 host to the local W max?
in ARG000188g, what's the host of the radio source to the S?Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00011mf
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00010r6
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002rtx
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003pj3
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
possible spiral, merger, tidal interaction, red outflows?
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00009gf
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0003m4t
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001xuh, First/NVSS
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001xsb
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001y5d
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
NVSS / FIRST around SDSS J113321.13+470145.2, it seems that in NVSS it could go beyond optical galaxy
SDSS J113321.13+470145.2 - 1237661357540966422
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
This one will require a DSS (or perhaps PANSTARRs or DECaLS) canvass; it's not in the SDSS footprint
Posted
-
by JeanTate in response to Dolorous_Edd's comment.
As HAndernach noted in the Comments, this is 3C 273, perhaps the most famous (true) quasar (quasi-stellar radio source). It has both an x-ray and optical jet.
Posted
-
by JeanTate
With the exception of 1yjk (images done, just not uploaded etc), all caught up, from p19 onwards ... except for five long lists (by me!) on p19 (the first one is done).
Posted
-
by Dolorous_Edd
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001isc
Posted
-
by JeanTate
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000u2k - what is the weird radio morphology? what is its host(s)?
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000t95 - is this an #overlap? #triple host is strange
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001en3 - what are the three radio sources in the center?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002ush, g-pair, star-forming emission?
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0002evo
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG00036wh: what is the host? Is it SDSS J002427.55+083811.8?
Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG00014le: at least two hosts among many possible ellipticals
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
which is the host? lenticular (or #disky) implied
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00018ktPosted
-
by ivywong scientist, admin
Yes I think this is a case where there is an overlap of emission from more than 1 radio galaxy
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001mrt, #x-shaped? or #wat, #relic, host?
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0001w4z
Posted
-
by sisifolibre
#SDRAGN? https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG000377k
Posted
-
by zutopian
NGC 5252
It hasn't a RGZ ID, but IDs in SDSS and FIRST!
Discussion, where I asked for the RGZ ID.:
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000005/discussions/DRG0000pwc
PS: Could you please send a PM after posting the image?
EDIT: update: Chris created and posted the overlay image.:
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/boards/BRG0000003/discussions/DRG0000rl8Posted
-
by JeanTate
ARG0001c3s: strange overedge triple?
ARG0000mny: overlay unlikely to show much, but still ... is the proximity to the bright star a cosmic coincidence?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003byd, triple
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG00017lt, extended NVSS emission
Posted
-
by c_cld
ARG0000m52 #SDRAGN? 2MASX J07280147+4935137 -- Galaxy z(~) 0.08 outside SDSS footprint
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003b35, triple, maybe #QSO, partly #green host SDSS J150440.06+071109.6
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002b91, wat, green host, lenticular?, SDSS J100044.51+204727.7
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001mdh, host SDSS J084759.04+314708.3, #overedge, IC 2402
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG00011r1, #overedge #triple, #giant, host SDSS J121609.60+415928.3
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003e29, #wat, host SDSS J162132.36+060719.1
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002nk2, multiple emissions, hosts?
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001fnc, #triple #restarted
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0000exf, #triple, #overedge, #restarted?
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002nh5, #overedge #diffuse #double
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003b9e, #double #noIR #nooptical, #overedge
ARG0002axm, rather extreme #slipstrike #doublePosted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002905, two separate lobes or a #double, one #overedge, hosts?
ARG00008zn, #triple, host maybe #QSO, SDSS J134803.98+570510.6
ARG0002c5w, unusual emission, maybe #triple, host #QSO, SDSS J122600.03+202054.2
ARG0001cla, #overedge, #bent #triple, host SDSS J164642.58+362710.7
ARG0003kr8, possibly #triple, faint ir source, #no-optical
ARG0001frx, #restarted #double?, host SDSS J142541.44+345827.3
ARG0003j7d, #triple or #restarted #double, host SDSS J151433.99+042513.7
ARG0003kg7, maybe #ifrs, Wise 1 image
ARG0001o0m, morphology? host?
ARG0001zmw, #triple or #wat, host SDSS J153536.69+253530.4
ARG0001ubk, #restarted, host SDSS J112829.38+280127.1
ARG0002i28, #triple, host?
ARG0003nk8, #slipstrike #triple? host?
ARG0001q4c, #bent #triple, host SDSS J171831.49+300248.6Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0000jv5, #double or #triple #slipstrike, host SDSS J145102.94+504911.2
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0002vmn, #overlap? or #wat, interacting galaxies, host SDSS J001835.96+121210.4
ARG0001r2c, #triple, #slipstrike, host SDSS J105300.50+293355.9Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG00006n4, maybe #wat, #overedge
ARG00029tk, #wat, #overlap
ARG0000rn2, unusual #triple, host SDSS J094037.08+465101.3?
ARG00008a6, host? W1 contours
ARG0002e51, #restarted #double, host SDSS J132613.67+192423.7
ARG0002imv, #one-sided #double, host SDSS J084539.19+172310.9
ARG0002cn9, #wat or two #doubles?Posted
-
by zutopian
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG00017lr
One double hourglass and a compact source (next to core of hourglass)
Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG00012s3, #NAT, #overedge double NE
ARG00014sw, unusual emissions
ARG0001sm2, #wat, #overedge interesting emissions
ARG0002vi8, #overedge #giant
ARG00006r1, #ifrs?
ARG0000eu9, NGC 3310, #wat?
ARG0002ctc, #double, unusual host
ARG00020pt, #diffuse #double, host?
ARG0002mms, #triple, host #green QSO? SDSS J103125.33+153627.1
ARG0002cto, #triple, host #green #QSO?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003q7y, #overedge #double, hosts?
ARG000109h, #Triple & #compact?
ARG0000ytk, #one-sided-double
ARG0001on9, #one-sided-double
ARG00020g0, #wat?
ARG0001mc3, #overedge #double or #triple?
ARG00010xe, #one-sided-double
ARG0003ija, #double, host #green
ARG0003glv, #overedge, 3C458
ARG0003mla, #overedge #triple & #nat
ARG00035vz, #restarted?
ARG00009ff, #bent #double, #cluster
ARG0001mmm, #bent #triple, #overlapping?
ARG0000ss6, #weird #asym #double
ARG00013ki, #bent #triple
ARG00020nu, #restarted
ARG0001d4v, #restarted
ARG0000u4o, #overedge #double, #restarted?
ARG0001icv, separate #compact lobes?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003l1e, #wat, #overlap, #cluster environment
ARG00032gx, #unusual, #restarted, #nat, #double, #overlaps?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG000050j, #overedge #triple
ARG0000fxf, #hourglass, #unusual #green host
ARG0002n6k, #overedge #double
ARG00002b1, #wat or #double?
ARG000363r, #nat #overlapping?
ARG0003d5i, #hourglass, #red-outflows, #green
ARG00012pr, #wat?
ARG00009f5, three emissions, #cluster environment? ARG0003oek, #one-sided
ARG00005sj, #wat
ARG0001km1, #double, #restarted
ARG0001j25, #double, #unusualPosted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0000v4b, #unusual direction emissions, #double
ARG0001155, #overedge #triple
ARG0001y52, #nat unusual #green galaxy, #merging
ARG0000gg0, #overedge #double, #slipstrike?
ARG0001gwk, #wat
ARG0000joe, #overedge #wat
ARG0001a92, #overedge #wat/triple?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003lvv, #double, host #green
ARG0002386, #overedge #giant
ARG00006x8, #double, #hybrid
ARG0001yzb, #double, unusual host
ARG0002tst, #hybrid?
ARG0000xgr, #wat, #hybrid?
ARG0003327, #triple?
ARG0001t4g, #double #overedge, #slipstrike?
ARG0000i1c, #triple,Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0000xew, #nat
ARG0003n0g, spectacular #nat or #wat
ARG0000zm4, #wat, #double?
ARG0002ib9, #double, #hybrid, unusual host
ARG000377v, #overedge #triple, #giant
ARG00034ks, #double #restarted, #host
ARG00039gd, morphology?
ARG0001ckx, #one-sided, unusual host
ARG00010a7, #nat, #overedge?Posted
-
by ChrisMolloy
ARG0000i1q, #giant, #restarted, #triple
ARG0003qoq, #wat
ARG0001mzo, #wat, #merger or interacting?
ARG0003j0k, #hourglass and #compact?
ARG00023ra, #one-sided #double?Posted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003exs, east #hourglass #SDRAGN candidate?
ARG0002jk7, #s-shaped #double, #merger
ARG0001zbf, 2 #one-dided #doubles?
ARG00029wl, #x-shaped
ARG0001ivh, #nat and #wat
ARG0002l6j, #overedge #triple #noir?
ARG0001pwj, #overedge #triple
ARG000105m, #overedge #triple
ARG0002obv, #asymetric #double
ARG0000iei, #triple? NVSS
ARG0002fki, #SDRAGN candidate?
ARG0001umv, #overedge
ARG00024wp, #hybrid?Posted
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by zutopian
https://radiotalk.galaxyzoo.org/#/subjects/ARG0000fef
Posted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001b95, #wat, host?
ARG000283v, cntr #weird #triple #WAT?
ARG0001klo, #triple
ARG0000wa1, #giant?
ARG0001597, #nat?
ARG0002l3f, #wat, unusual host
ARG0003fi3, unusual #triple, high z host?
ARG0001dy7, unusual emission, #wat?
ARG0001o1m, #triple?, high z hostPosted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003i9y, #diffuse #triple
ARG0000cpl, #overedge #twisting, #wat
ARG0000mn0, #double, host #SDRAGN?
ARG000157o, #wat, #restarted
ARG00009sg, #NAT
ARG0002enc, interesting #wat?
ARG0001so1, #one-sided #double? or #restarted #compact?
ARG0002i2k, #overedge, #restarted, #triple
ARG0000k87, #one-sided #double?
ARG0001u0z, #triple, #hotspots
ARG0000umu, #weird #triplePosted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG0003gc5, #faint #asym #double, host?
ARG0000o6l, #diffuse #double,
ARG0000u6p, #bent #triple
ARG0001u5o, #hybrid?
ARG0001xw1, interesting alignment
ARG0001dmf, #wat
ARG0002kqj, #double, interesting hostPosted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG00010fa, 2 #nats, #overlap?
ARG0000ve8, #overedge #triple
ARG0001slk #restarted #bent #NAT?
ARG0001tk8, #hybrid, #cluster, #double?
ARG0002kc2, #one-sided #double
ARG0001m7r, multiple emissions and #overedge
ARG0002331, #double, #overedge? host?
ARG0000rkw, #double, #overedge? host?
ARG00037hi, #weird #asym #slipstrike #triple?, #sdragn?
ARG0003ejc, #weird #overedge #bent #asym #triple #WAT? #giant?
ARG0001v19, #overedge #triple, #restarted?Posted
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by ChrisMolloy
ARG0001dqo, #overedge, #restarted
ARG0000ee0, #overedge, #wat
ARG00003cg, #hourglass, #SDRAGN candidate
ARG0002rtv, #triple?
ARG0000fa9, #triple?
ARG000204k, #interesting #wat, more than one emission?
ARG0003b86, #morphology? hosts?
ARG0003g6k, #double, #green host?
ARG000008c, #double, #SDRAGN host?
ARG0002w5j, #one-sided #double?
ARG0000rck, #overlapping emissions?
ARG0000js7, #lensed lobe or #one-sided?
ARG000331t, 2 emissions?Posted