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Watercolors - Measuring the light field in natural waters

Watercolors - Measuring the light field in natural waters

Wednesday, December 4, 2019 at 4:00 pm
Weniger 304
Nicholas Tufillaro
Visible light is one the few wavelengths that has any significant transmissivity through natural waters: oceans, lakes, streams, and ponds. Light is a primary tool for investigating biological or physical processes in water from sensors in orbit, instruments on ships, or spectrometers in the water itself. I will focus on describing how to see --- in vivo --- the activities of phytoplankton in natural waters, both individual micro-swimmers (~10 microns) up-to large assemblages of diatoms (~ 10 km), and how these measurements are used to understand and gauge biological productivity at both the watershed and global scale. The talk will also discuss a few challenges in trying to do precision measurements in natural environments, instead of the our more natural habitat, the "lab,"and some of the changes that are helpful to optical instrument design. Here are some videos of what we are up to: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcHd9hxSAV6sj8aT3RCtajg
David McIntyre