Globe at Night | |
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Keywords | Light Pollution, Astronomy, Scotobiology, Citizen Science, Crowdsourcing |
Funding agency | National Science Foundation via NOIRLab |
Objective | Measuring and raising awareness of artificial light pollution |
Project coordinator | AURA, Connie Walker |
Partners | International Dark-Sky Association, CADIAS |
Duration | 2006 – |
Website | Official website |
Globe at Night is an international scientific research program that crowdsources measurements of light pollution in the night sky. At set time periods within each year, the project asks people to count the number of stars that they can see from their location and report it to the project's website. The coordinating researchers compile this information to produce a public, freely available map of global light pollution. By September 2011, almost 70,000 measurements had been made.[1] The use of data collected by the public makes the program an example of citizen science.[2] Globe at Night began as a NASA educational program in the US organized by the NOAO, and was expanded internationally during the 2009 International Year of Astronomy;[3] it is an offshoot of the GLOBE Program, which focuses on school-based science education.
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