The ambitious project aims to
Professor Adam Summers of the University of Washington (UW) is working on an ambitious project: Scanning and digitizing images of all the fish species on Earth.
His goal is to set up an information center on the morphology of all the fish species in the world, making this a place where scientists look to each time they study the morphology and structure of aquatic organisms.
The task is not simple, because there are 25,000 species of fish on Earth. Mr. Summers installed a computerized tomography (CT) machine at the research facility to help him scan and record images of all fish species digitally.
A CT photo of the fish of Adam Summers.(Photo: UW).
They have just digitized more than 500 species of fish and are planning to collect thousands more species for their database. Summers also invited other colleagues to do the same to build a complete collection.
Mr. Summers describes his work mainly focusing on biology, more specifically biological simulations . He plans to use his knowledge of how the animal body operates under certain conditions to develop usable technologies to solve technical problems.
Over the years, Mr. Summers was able to develop different techniques that allowed him to scan many fish samples. This helped him reduce the expected time to implement the project from 50 years to just a few years.
According to Summers, this database system will be provided free to scientists, helping them to have more information channels for research. This is very significant because CT scans are expensive - about US $ 500-2,000 each time.
- Google and the project to organize the bookstore online
- Google reveals more about the project
- NASA identifies three goals in the project:
- Google Art Project - The museum doesn't buy tickets, doesn't close and doesn't ... queue up
- Thailand is preparing to deploy a laptop per child project
- Japan aims to bring people to the Moon by 2030
- Australia, South Africa build super telescopes
- XO computer docked in Uruguay
- Music community We7
- Reconnect with the old satellite
- Google 'death declaration' service of Smart Answer
- CryoSat-2 satellite examines the thickness of the ice regions at 2 poles