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MORISH IDOL AGGREGATION

Network diagram - wireless aggregation and distribution

Dendron drawing software (2001), exploring gestural augmentation through diffusion-limited aggregation.

Morish Idol Spawning Aggregation - Palau

 

A fish aggregating (or aggregation) device (FAD) is a man-made object used to attract ocean going pelagic fish such as marlin, tuna and mahi-mahi (dolphin fish).

 

They usually consist of buoys or floats tethered to the ocean floor with concrete blocks.

 

Fish are fascinated with floating objects. They aggregate in considerable numbers around objects such as drifting flotsam, rafts, jellyfish, floating seaweed ... FADs!

Batray Aggregation GoPro Hero 4 Black

Currently there are more than eight modules that handle aggregation in Drupal. Several developers are looking at ways to consolidate the strengths of each into one better module for Drupal 7. There is a cool session proposed for DrupalCon in September ot talk about this: barcelona2007.drupalcon.org/node/207. Some of the lead developers will discuss what they’re working on and what current aggregation modules can do, and ask for ideas and feedback of what features the ideal module should include.

This tally sheet at an aggregation center in Ariana, Tunis, compiles the results of 95 candidate lists. Nicolas Kaczorowski/IFES

Image credit: CC-BY Erwin Verbruggen

Many species of fish in the Gulf of Mexico like this goliath grouper come together and form dense aggregations to spawn. Scientists will begin to compile existing data on these aggregations to get a better understanding of the fisheries, which can help resource managers figure out just how many fish really are in the sea. Credit: Nick Farmer, NOAA.

Twin Spot Snapper (Lutjanus bohar) Spawning Aggregation

In Palau

You Can’t Hold Water: Works by Graduate Studio Artists, Sella-Granata Art Gallery October 1 -- November 2, 2012. There will be an artist reception on Friday, October 12 from 5-8 p.m in the gallery. The public is invited to attend, to meet the artists and encouraged to ask them about their work.

Image credit: CC-BY Erwin Verbruggen

Grouper Spawning Aggregation

 

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Grouper Spawning Aggregation

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Music Library, Athens Concert Hall, 25 June 2015, Athens. Credit: Credit: Katerina Komninou.

Fish spawning aggregation at Gladden Spit

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

You Can’t Hold Water: Works by Graduate Studio Artists, Sella-Granata Art Gallery October 1 -- November 2, 2012. There will be an artist reception on Friday, October 12 from 5-8 p.m in the gallery. The public is invited to attend, to meet the artists and encouraged to ask them about their work.

July 9, 2014

  

At the debris outside an ant nest.

  

San Felipe Creek, Anza Borrego Desert, California

 

A collection of new ring phenomena, first observed in the sequence of

images taken of the dark side of Saturn's rings immediately after Cassini

entered orbit, may be evidence of the clumping and aggregation of ring

particles. This phenomena is caused by the combined gravitational effects

of Saturn, orbiting moons, and other ring particles.

  

Image A displays an unusual mottled-looking narrow region, with a radial

width varying with longitude from 5 to 10 kilometers (3 to 6 miles), seen

for the first time about 60 kilometers (37 miles) inside the outer edge of

Saturn's A ring. The resolution of this dayside image is about 1 kilometer

(0.6 miles) per pixel. Image B is a close-up of the region, mapped into a

longitude-radius system and contrast enhanced. The region is characterized

by blotchy light and dark areas about 30 to 40 kilometers (19 to 25 miles)

in longitudinal extent. The observed longitudinal extent of this region is

about 3.5 degrees.

  

The mottled regions also are probably caused by particle clumping brought

about by gravitational disturbances. The outer A ring edge is sculpted

into a seven-lobed pattern called a Lindblad resonance (a type of

dynamical resonance that occurs in rings systems) with the co-orbital

satellites Janus and Epimetheus. The resonant perturbations in this

region are complicated by the presence of these two moons whose orbits

are within 50 kilometers (31 miles) of each other.

  

Image C is a dark-side image of the outer edge of the Encke gap, with a

resolution of about 270 meters (886 feet) pixel, taken 18 degrees

upstream from the moon Pan, which inhabits the gap. The regularly spaced,

narrow dark lanes observed here are the wakes caused by Pan. Rope-like

features can be seen between the first two wakes nearest the gap edge.

These features are unique in all Cassini images taken so far. They

generally are between 10 and 20 kilometers (6 and 12 miles) long.

  

In their orbits around Saturn, the particles comprising the rings in this

region pass through the Pan wakes. When they do so, they are forced closer

together than usual. These ropy features appear to be a product of the

enhanced gravitational disturbances that occur when the particles pass

through the wakes caused by Pan and consequently are squeezed close

together. These disturbances obviously persist even outside the wakes, as

is evident here in the presence of the ropy structures in the bands in

between the wakes.

  

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the

European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion

Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in

Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate,

Washington, D.C. The Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras were

designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging team is based at

the Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colo.

  

For more information about the Cassini-Huygens mission, visit

saturn.jpl.nasa.gov and the Cassini imaging team home page,

ciclops.org.

  

credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

Europeana Aggregation Strategy Workshop

You Can’t Hold Water: Works by Graduate Studio Artists, Sella-Granata Art Gallery October 1 -- November 2, 2012. There will be an artist reception on Friday, October 12 from 5-8 p.m in the gallery. The public is invited to attend, to meet the artists and encouraged to ask them about their work.

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