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Crowdsourced gamers identify two potential new planets

Gamers have once more come through for science, helping to spot what may be two previously unidentified planets outside the solar system.

Gamasutra reports that the two new entities were discovered by players of the browser game Planet Hunters, an initiative of The University of Oxford and Yale University among other collaborators.

The game shows players actual recorded data of star light from the Kepler archive, and asks them to hunt for particular patterns which suggest the existence of planets and other objects.

Records flagged by gamers are then reviewed by a small group of scientists, who would otherwise have no hope of ploughing through the 150,000 records on file this side of next century - crowdsourcing, in other words. The Royal Astronomical Society then credits every user whose participation contributed to the identity of new objects of interest.

The two new planets were discovered just one month after the game launched. Following the announcement of the discoveries, Interest in the game has spiked, resulting in server overload, so you may want to save the URL and come back later.

The news comes hot on the heels of last week's revelation that gamers had assisted in unraveling the protein structure of the AIDS virus, research with important implications for future treatments and the search for a cure.

Thanks, IndustryGamers.

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Brenna Hillier avatar

Brenna Hillier

Contributor

Based in Australia and having come from a lengthy career in the Aussie games media, Brenna worked as VG247's remote Deputy Editor for several years, covering news and events from the other side of the planet to the rest of the team. After leaving VG247, Brenna retired from games media and crossed over to development, working as a writer on several video games.
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