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If your question about using the Virtual Microscope is not answered here, please visit our Forum. If your question is about configuring your internet browser, please refer to the Tech FAQ. If you are unclear about the purpose of the virtual microscope, or what choices you have to be make about the movies you see in the virtual microscope, consider retaking the tutorial.
Q1. When should I use the "Bad Focus" button?
The ideal focus situation would be such that the surface is in focus near the middle to upper third of the focus range. Particle tracks will only be visible starting at the surface (not above it) and will remain in focus below the surface. So it is necessary to be able to focus to a reasonable depth below the surface of the aerogel. Example 1 - If you find a movie where the focus is too high and the surface never comes into focus, then click "Bad Focus." Example 2 - If you find a movie where the focus just barely makes it to the surface but does not go far enough below to be able to tell if there is a track or not, then click "Bad Focus." Example 3 - Sometimes the surface is very tilted, but it is still possible to see every part of the field of view below the surface. Click "No Track" or on a track if you happen to see one in the field of view. Example 4 - Other times it is so sloped that you cannot get all of the field below the surface. In these cases, click "Bad Focus." Example 5 - Occasionally, people come across a movie that has more than one field of view mixed in. As described in the FAQ about this, this is really only a problem if the split happens near the middle of the focus range and prevents you from determining if there is a track or not. If it does prevent you from making a clear determination, then click "Bad Focus." Otherwise click as normal. Visit our forum about bad focus for more discussion. Q2. Can I review calibration movies?
However, you cannot use the My Events viewer to view calibration movies. If you plug in the movie ID# for a calibration movie in the My Events viewer it will return a real movie that has the same ID#. Remember that the calibration movies are there to help you in your search, but they are not the standard for what a real track looks like. We simply do not know what a real track looks like at this point and the calibration movies are there to help show you what a real track might look like. Q3.Can I change my answers or remove events?
Q1. What do I do with this strange/interesting/weird movie?
Q2. This movie has other movie images in it. What should I do?
If you can, ignore the out-of-place image and decide on the merits of the rest of the movie. If the movie is split so that you cannot view below the surface of the aerogel, click Bad Focus to signal that we need to rescan those coordinates.
Your score is the number of correct calibration movies (either you found the track, or rightly selected No Track) minus the number of calibration movies you answered incorrectly. Only calibration movies count towards your score. Approximately 80% of the focus movies that you view are real Stardust data.We don't know the answer to them yet! Real focus movies, whether they have a track, no track or are out of focus will not affect your score. Q1. Does it matter if you get a low score?
Q2. Are some people cheating to get a high score?
Questions about Miscellaneous Topics Q1.Where is my certificate?
The other certificates are not yet released due to two reasons:
Please search through our forum for more topics.
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