Radio Galaxy Zoo: host galaxies and radio morphologies derived from visual inspection
J.K. Banfield, O.I. Wong, K.W. Willett, R.P. Norris, L. Rudnick, S.S., Shabala, B.D. Simmons, C. Snyder, A. Garon, N. Seymour, E. Middelberg, H., Andernach, C.J. Lintott, K. Jacob, A.D. Kapinska, M.Y. Mao, K.L. Masters,, M.J. Jarvis, K. Schawinski, E. Paget, R. Simpson

TL;DR
Radio Galaxy Zoo is a large citizen science project that visually classifies over 170,000 radio sources to identify host galaxies and morphologies, revealing insights into galaxy types and active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
This study introduces the Radio Galaxy Zoo project, demonstrating effective citizen science participation in classifying radio sources and analyzing host galaxy properties.
Findings
Participants are as effective as experts in host galaxy identification.
Most hosts are elliptical, QSO, or LIRG galaxies in mid-infrared colour space.
A distinct population of star-forming and dust-rich galaxies suggests merger-driven AGN formation.
Abstract
We present results from the first twelve months of operation of Radio Galaxy Zoo, which upon completion will enable visual inspection of over 170,000 radio sources to determine the host galaxy of the radio emission and the radio morphology. Radio Galaxy Zoo uses GHz radio images from both the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty Centimeters (FIRST) and the Australia Telescope Large Area Survey (ATLAS) in combination with mid-infrared images at m from the {\it Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer} (WISE) and at m from the {\it Spitzer Space Telescope}. We present the early analysis of the WISE mid-infrared colours of the host galaxies. For images in which there is consensus among the Radio Galaxy Zoo cross-identifications, the project participants are as effective as the science experts at identifying the host galaxies. The majority of the…
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