I came across this interesting project named '
Galaxy Zoo' in a podcast by 'scientific american'. It is an online collaborative project where people can volunteer to identify characteristics of galaxies. The idea behind this project is that humans are much better at pattern recognition than computers. Pat yourself on the back!. It is impossible or very tough job for computers to identify all characteristics of a photographs what humans can do it with ease. This project already has more than 2,00,000 volunteers. These people had done jobs that would take years for the computers and the astro physicists in matter of months.
The job of human volunteers is
very simple. Each volunteer will be presented with pictures of galaxies. The volunteer has to identify if the galaxy is elliptical or spiral, if it is rotating clockwise or anti-clockwise, if ther is a bulge in the center, how many number of spiral arms are there etc. You can even say if the galaxy looks odd. For reliability, the same picture is shown to multiple volunteers. So, one need not fear that he/she will jepordize the project by making a wrong choice.
With the help of a volunteer, the scientists have identified a new object called "Hanny's Voorwerp", which was not known earlier. Now, they are spending more time on unravelling the mystery behind this new object, which they think is a gas cloud heated by jet stream from a black hole. They named the new object on the name of the volunteer. Cool! isn't it ? See the green object in the image below.

Go grab you pie!