Radio Galaxy Zoo Data Release 1: 100,185 radio source classifications from the FIRST and ATLAS surveys
O. Ivy Wong, A. F. Garon, M. J. Alger, L. Rudnick, S. S. Shabala, K., W. Willett, J. K. Banfield, H. Andernach, R. P. Norris, J. Swan, M. J., Hardcastle, C. J. Lintott, S. V. White, N. Seymour, A. D. Kapi\'nska, H., Tang, B. D. Simmons, K. Schawinski

TL;DR
Radio Galaxy Zoo DR1 is a large citizen science project that classified over 100,000 radio sources from FIRST and ATLAS surveys, aiding in identifying host galaxies and complex structures.
Contribution
This work provides the first large-scale, publicly available radio source classifications from citizen scientists, improving source identification and enabling machine learning applications.
Findings
Classified 100,185 radio sources with 0.83 reliability
Provided detailed component and host galaxy tables
Supported machine learning training and source population studies
Abstract
Radio galaxies can extend far beyond the stellar component of their originating host galaxies, and their radio emission can consist of multiple discrete components. Furthermore, the apparent source structure will depend on survey sensitivity, resolution and the observing frequency. Associated discrete radio components and their originating host galaxy are typically identified through a visual comparison of radio and mid-infrared survey images. We present the first data release of Radio Galaxy Zoo, an online citizen science project that enlists the help of citizen scientists to cross-match extended radio sources from the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty Centimeters (FIRST) and the Australia Telescope Large Area Survey (ATLAS) surveys, often with complex structure, to host galaxies in 3.6 um infrared images from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) and the Spitzer Space…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
