Visualizing air traffic patterns

One word: awesome.

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So would Wilbur and Orville.

wow

By chris rattis (not verified) on 12 Jun 2007 #permalink

Anyone else see a cytoskeleton?

Maybe it's just me..

By protobiochemist (not verified) on 12 Jun 2007 #permalink

It's not just you, that definitely reminded me of the time lapse photography so beloved by my former cell biology colleagues. Fantastic stuff. Anyone know how to make the clip into a screensaver?

Cytoskeleton was the first thing I thought.

Hey! There I am! On the flight to North Carolina! Can you see me?

By Crudely Wrott (not verified) on 12 Jun 2007 #permalink

In a previous existance I was the engineer in charge of a Royal Australian Air Force radar installation, just at the moment when we were changing over from those round sweep screens that you see in the old war movies, to digital displays.

The funny thing was that those old screens used a phosphore that remained active for a very long time, so long that the "hits" were visible for around about 5 sweeps of the radar, though they obviously faded with time. This left a fading "track" on the screen which air defence controllers find very useful. The net result is that as these systems were replaced around the world, we were obliged to emulate this fading track in software, so that the controllors were kept happy. Aaron's first screens show this effect very nicely.

By demallien (not verified) on 12 Jun 2007 #permalink

I should point out that this replacement happened only about 8 years ago for the RAAF. Ahead of the times they were not!

By demallien (not verified) on 12 Jun 2007 #permalink

Its alive, its alive!!!

By Arnosium Upinarum (not verified) on 13 Jun 2007 #permalink

Awesome indeed. Roads, rails, air travel; all examples of our extended phenotypes. All expressions of our genes gone wild. It's no surprise it looks alive. It is.

By HPLC_Sean (not verified) on 13 Jun 2007 #permalink

That was just mind blowing. When you consider the scale of human achievement that represents it is just stunning. As Christopher Hitchens has taken to saying: More impressive than any burning bush.

All due respect to Bernoulli, the Wrights, and human achievement.

All those seemingly alive tracks represent tons and tons of CO2 - calculated at one pound of CO2 per passenger mile on domestic filghts. Two pounds per/pm on international flights.

Some folks fly. Other folks die.

By gerald spezio (not verified) on 13 Jun 2007 #permalink

There seems to be an absence of the article here.... why?

By jirpajihad (not verified) on 17 Apr 2010 #permalink

jirpajihad, because the entirety of the article is a link to another site, claiming that the contents thereof are awesome.

Look again.

By John Morales (not verified) on 17 Apr 2010 #permalink