Active Asteroids (citizen science project) explained

Active Asteroids
Commercial:No
Type:Citizen science project
Language:English
Registration:Optional
Current Status:Online

Active Asteroids is a NASA partner citizen science project that successfully discovered active asteroids, including main-belt comets, quasi-Hilda objects, and Jupiter family comets. The project is hosted on the Zooniverse platform and is funded by a NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program. It uses images from the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) to search for tails around asteroids and other minor planets. The research team is led by Colin Orion Chandler. As of April 2024 about 8300 volunteers carried out 6.7 million classifications of 430 thousand images. At the time only 60 active asteroids were known and 16 new active objects were discovered by this project, significantly increasing the sample of known objects.

Pre-launch preparation

Before the team launched the project, the team gained experience with DECam and published three papers. These include detection of activity around previously known active asteroid (62412) 2000 SY178, revealing 6 years of avtivity on (6478) Gault and activity discovered on the centaur 2014 OG392.

Discoveries

The project uses a pipeline called HARVEST, which compares metadata from astronomical image archives with the data from the Minor Planet Center and produces images at positions of minor planets. It also excludes images with no detection or images that cannot detect asteroids. Since February 2024 the team also used a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), called TailNet, to filter out bad images before they are shown to volunteers and to identify high-likely candidates. This CNN uses classification-labels made by the volunteers and is constantly improved with new classifications. One of the first discovery was made in September 2022, when the team published a paper describing that 282P/(323137) 2003 BM80 showed sustained activity over 15 months in 2021-2022. Activity was previously reported in 2012-2013 and the team analysed the orbit, finding that it is an outbursting quasi-Hilda object.

List of discoveries

!Name!family!type of activity!year-month of disovery!Reference!Previous discovery of activity
2015 TC1Jupiter-family comet2022-01no
2017 QN84Jupiter-family comet2022-01no
282Pquasi-Hilda object (former Centaur or Jupiter-family comet)volatile sublimation2013-06/2022-09yes, Bolin et al.
2015 FW412main-belt comet candidatesublimation2023-02no
2015 VA108main-belt comet candidatevolatile sublimation2023-02no
2009 DQ118quasi-Hilda object (former Jupiter family comet or Centaur)sublimation of volatile ices2023-03no
2010 LH15 (aka 2010 TJ175)main-belt comet2023-03no
(588045) 2007 FZ18main-belt comet candidatetwo tails2023-05no
2018 CZ16quasi-Hilda objectthermally driven activity indicative of water-ice sublimation2023-05no
2005 XR132Jupiter-family comet2021-04/2023-07yes, Cheng et al.
2004 CV50quasi-Hilda object2023-11no
(551023) 2012 UQ192Jupiter-family Cometrecurrently active, sublimation2023-12no
2019 OE31vacationing Centaurvolatile sublimation2023-12no
2008 QZ44Jupiter-family comet2023-12no
2018 VL10Jupiter-family comet (Mars crossing)2023-12no
2018 ORJupiter-family comet (Mars crossing)2024-01no
(410590) 2008 GB140main-belt comet candidate2024-02TailNet identified activityno
2016 UU121main-belt comet candidate2024-02TailNet identified activityno
2011 UG104Jupiter-family comet2024-05TailNet identified activityno
2015 VP51Jupiter-family cometsuspected sublimation2024-09TailNet filtered, identified by citizen scientistsno
2010 MK43 (aka 2010 RA78)Jupiter-family comet (former quasi-Hilda object)2024-09TailNet filtered, identified by citizen scientistsno

See also

other citizen science projects researching minor planets:

other citizen science projects