NASA offering USD 35k to citizen scientists to help locate incoming asteroids
NASA`s Asteroid Data Hunter contest series will reward citizen scientists 35,000 dollars, who develop improved algorithms that can be used to identify asteroids, over the next six months.
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Washington: NASA`s Asteroid Data Hunter contest series will reward citizen scientists 35,000 dollars, who develop improved algorithms that can be used to identify asteroids, over the next six months.
This contest series is being conducted in partnership with Planetary Resources Inc. of Bellevue, Wash.
The first contest in the series will kick off on March 17. Prior to the kick off, competitors can create an account on the contest series website and learn more about the rules and different phases of the contest series by going to: http://bit.ly/AsteroidHunters
Managed by the NASA Tournament Lab, the entire contest series runs through August and is the first contest series contributing to the agency`s Asteroid Grand Challenge.
"For the past three years, NASA has been learning and advancing the ability to leverage distributed algorithm and coding skills through the NASA Tournament Lab to solve tough problems," Jason Crusan, NASA Tournament Lab director, said.
"We are now applying our experience with algorithm contests to helping protect the planet from asteroid threats through image analysis," he said.
The Asteroid Data Hunter contest series challenges participants to develop significantly improved algorithms to identify asteroids in images captured by ground-based telescopes.
The winning solution must increase the detection sensitivity, minimize the number of false positives, ignore imperfections in the data, and run effectively on all computer systems.
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