michael mccomb

seeing things differently from hong kong

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      14 Mar 2010

      Color wheel from the seasons

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      Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg
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      7 Dec 2009

      How do hammerheads see?

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      Hammerhead Sight
      Hammerheads keep an eye on Dr. McComb, photo by S. Kajura
      Hammerhead sharks are some of the most improbable looking beasts in the sea. Dr. Michelle McComb, a researcher at the Shark Lab of Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, has been studying how these strange beasts see. The fact that their eyes are out at the ends of their oddly shaped heads was thought to be a problem for their vision. This, Dr. McComb has discovered, is not the case. In fact, the several species of hammerheads have remarkable binocular vision, and their widely-spaced eyes give them excellent depth perception. In addition, they also have an extremely wide field of view - up to 360 degrees. What this means is that hammerheds are well equipped to see their prey - and their predators. Listen to the interview (scroll down a little) [cbc.ca]
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      19 Apr 2008

      Eye In The Sky Brands East Asia Dirty

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      According to measurements taken with a satellite instrument, vast quantities of industrial aerosols and smoke from biomass burning in East Asia and Russia are traveling from one side of the globe to another. Explosive economic growth in Asia has profound implications for the atmosphere worldwide. In a new NASA study, researchers taking advantage of improvements in satellite sensor capabilities offer the first measurement-based estimate of the amount of pollution from East Asian forest fires, urban exhaust, and industrial production that makes its way to western North America. China, the world's most populated country, has experienced rapid industrial growth, massive human migrations to urban areas, and considerable expansion in automobile use over the last two decades. As a result, the country has doubled its emissions of man-made pollutants to become the world's largest emitter of tiny particles called pollution aerosols that are transported across the Pacific Ocean by rapid airstreams emanating from East Asia. Hongbin Yu, an associate research scientist of the University of Maryland Baltimore County working at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., grew up in China and taught there as a university professor, where he witnessed first-hand and studied how pollution from nearby power plants in China affected the local environment. Early this decade, scientists began using emerging high-accuracy satellite data to answer key questions about the role tiny particles play in the atmosphere, and eventually expanded their research to include continent-to-continent pollution transport. So Yu teamed with other researchers to take advantage of the innovations in satellite technology and has now made the first-ever satellite-based estimate of pollution aerosols transported from East Asia to North America. [From TerraDaily]
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  • michael mccomb

    Seeing things differently from Hong Kong. Posts on a little of everything from brands, sports, environment, and China to parenting, photography, journalism and the occasional oddity.

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