![]() posted 9/14.2009 1 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 500Kb JPG Sierra Nevada birds move in response to warmer, wetter climate CAPTION: An adult male Western Bluebird, Sialia mexicana, a low elevation species, holding a large beetle. This bird species was found to have shifted its geographical range in response to both temperature and precipitation. Credit: Morgan Tingley |
![]() posted 9/14.2009 2 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 1.1Mb JPG CAPTION: An adult male Anna's Hummingbird, Calypte anna, is an urban-adapted species. Unlike many other bird species in the Sierra Nevada mountains, the Anna's Hummingbird did not track its climatic niche. Instead, it moved away from it. Credit: Morgan Tingley |
![]() posted 9/14.2009 3 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 660Kb JPG CAPTION: A high elevation species, the Clark's Nutcracker, or Nucifraga columbiana, responded to climate change by tracking temperature. Credit: Morgan Tingley |
![]() posted 9/14.2009 4 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 250Kb JPG CAPTION: A low elevation species, the Bullock's Oriole, or Icterus bullockii, responded to climate change by tracking precipitation. Credit: Morgan Tingley |
![]() posted 9/14.2009 5 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 1.1Mb JPG CAPTION: Pascal Title (left) and Morgan Tingley conduct a point count in the field. Credit: Allison Shultz |
![]() posted 8.29.2009 |
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4Mb JPG CAPTION: UCPD officer Ally Jacobs and police specialist Lisa Campbell Credit: Cathy Cockrell/UC Berkeley NewsCenter
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![]() posted 8.03.2009 |
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3.2Mb JPG Mark Rosenzweig, pioneer in brain plasticity, learning and hearing, has died at 86 CAPTION: Mark R. Rosenzweig
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![]() posted 7.23.2009 1 of 3 |
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1Mb JPG CAPTION: CellScope prototype configured for fluorescent imaging. Credit: David Breslauer |
posted 7.23.2009 2 of 3 |
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272Kb JPG CAPTION: Schematic of the CellScope set up for fluorescent imaging. For bright field imaging, the two filters and LED are removed. Credit: David Breslauer
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1.6Mb JPG CAPTION: Fluorescent images of TB bacteria taken by a cell phone microscope. The red-outlined bacteria in Figure A are enlarged in Figure B. In Figure C, image analysis software automatically counted how many bacteria were present in the sample. Credit: David Breslauer |
![]() posted 7.21.2009 |
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240Kb JPG For horned lizard, horns alone do not make the species CAPTION: A coast horned lizard. Credit: Paul Bratescu |
![]() posted 7.21.2009 |
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660Kb JPG Jupiter pummeled, leaving bruise the size of the Pacific Ocean CAPTION: The scar from the probably impact appeared July 19 in Jupiter's southern hemisphere, and has grown to a size greater than the extent of the Pacific Ocean. This infrared image taken with Keck II on July 20 shows the new feature observed on Jupiter and its relative size compared to Earth. Credit: Paul Kalas (UCB), Michael Fitzgerald (LLNL/UCLA), Franck Marchis (SETI Institute/UCB), James Graham (UCB) |
![]() posted 7.21.2009 |
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1.6Mb JPG CAPTION: Mitchell J. Celaya III — a UC Berkeley, assistant police chief with more than 25 years of experience handling everything from protests, sit-ins and critical emergency situations to visits by world leaders — has been selected as the campus's new chief of police. Credit: Kalonica McQuesten photo |
![]() posted 7.20.2009 |
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668Kb JPG Brain can develop motor memory for prosthetics, study finds CAPTION: Signals from the brain's motor cortex were translated by a "decoder" into deliberate movements of a computer cursor. The task involved moving the cursor from a central starting point to a nearby target. UC Berkeley researchers have learned that the brain is capable of developing a motor memory of the task, much like it masters other physical skills such as riding a bike or playing tennis, but with the added distinction that the control is of a device separate from one's own body. Credit: © John Blanchard illustration |
![]() posted 5.20.2009 |
print-quality image: 72dpi, 1.8Mb JPG Matias Tarnopolsky is new director of Cal Performances CAPTION: Matías Tarnopolsky, formerly with the New York Philharmonic and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, has been named the new director of Cal Performances. Credit: Kat Wade |
![]() posted 5.12.2009 |
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925Kb JPG Top graduating senior, Emma Shaw Crane, is an intellectual superstar CAPTION: Emma Shaw Crane is the winner of UC Berkeley's 2009 University Medal. As the campus's top graduating senior, she will speak at Commencement Convocation and receive a $2,500 scholarship. Her major is Interdisciplinary Studies and her minor is Global Poverty & Practice. Credit: Peg Skorpinski
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![]() posted 5.8.2009 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 2.1Mb JPG Neil Henry named dean of Graduate School of Journalism CAPTION: Award-winning journalist, author and professor Neil Henry is the new dean of the University of California, Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism. Credit: UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism |
![]() posted 4.28.2009 |
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5.6Mb JPG Jennifer Wolch named new dean of UC Berkeley's College of Environmental Design CAPTION: Jennifer Wolch, incoming dean of UC Berkeley's College of Environmental Design, will take the helm at CED on July 1. Wolch comes from the University of Southern California, where she was a professor of geography and urban planning and director of the Center for Sustainable Cities. Credit: Courtesy of UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design |
![]() posted 4.20.2009 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 1.2Mb JPG Al Gore to speak at groundbreaking of new Blum poverty studies building CAPTION: Artist's rendering of planned renovations to the Naval Architecture Building (right), which will house the Blum Center for Developing Economies and College of Engineering faculty. The rendering includes a new wing (left), and plazas and raised connectors that will link the complex to other buildings on campus. Launched in 2006, the Blum Center is a multi-disciplinary initiative established to combat global poverty. Credit: UC Berkeley Capital Projects |
![]() posted 2.26.2009 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 3.2Mb JPG Economist James L. Pierce, authority on banking and monetary policy, dies CAPTION: James L. Pierce, a professor emeritus of economics at UC Berkeley and an authority on banking and monetary policy. Credit: Jon Pierce |
![]() posted 2.13.2009 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 400Kb JPG CAPTION: John Roy Whinnery, former dean of engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, and a distinguished innovator in the field of electromagnetism and communication electronics. Credit: Peg Skorpinski |
![]() posted 11.24.2008 |
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![]() posted 11.10.2008 1 of 3 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 5Mb JPG CAPTION: A GPS-enabled cellphone displays real-time traffic information using software being tested by UC Berkeley and Nokia researchers. Credit: Peg Skorpinski |
![]() posted 11.10.2008 2 of 3 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 6Mb JPG CAPTION: Lisa Alvarez-Cohen (right), professor of civil and environmental engineering at UC Berkeley, is among the first early adopters to download the pilot traffic software, with assistance from visiting graduate student Aude Hofleitner. Credit: Peg Skorpinski |
![]() posted 11.10.2008 3 of 3 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 5.8Mb JPG CAPTION: Adib Kanafani (left), UC Berkeley professor of civil and environmental engineering, observes his new traffic-information software with Rick Warner (center) of Parking Carma and Randell Iwasaki, chief deputy director of Caltrans. Credit: Peg Skorpinski |
![]() posted 10.22.2008 1 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 3.7Mb JPG Denser computer chips possible with plasmonic lenses that 'fly' CAPTION: In this schematic of plasmonic lithography, the plasmonic flying head produces nanoscale patterns onto the spinning disk covered with photo sensitive chemicals. Ultraviolet light is delivered through the flying head onto the plasmonic lenses, which are used as optical styluses in this process. The setup resembles a stylus playing a record on traditional LP turntables. Credit: Liang Pan and Cheng Sun, UC Berkeley |
![]() posted 10.22.2008 2 of 2 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 440Kb JPG CAPTION: In this scanning electron image of a 4-by-4 array of plasmonic lenses, each lens is 4 micrometers in diameter and can be used as an optical stylus in the pattern writing process. Credit: Courtesy of Xiang Zhang Lab, UC Berkeley |
![]() posted 10.2.2008 |
print-quality image: 88Kb PNG PACE studies offer recommendations for California schools CAPTION: This chart shows the differential rates at which groups of students are chosen to participate in the Gifted and Talented Education program. It indicates that white and Asian students are overrepresented by as much as 100 percent relative to their representation in the population. Credit: Policy Analysis for California Education |
![]() posted 10.2.2008 |
print-quality image: 300dpi, 840Kb JPG Sharper Jupiter images from next-generation adaptive optics CAPTION: This false color image of Jupiter combines a series of images taken over 20 minutes on Aug. 17 by the Multi- Conjugate Adaptive Optics Demonstrator (MAD) prototype instrument mounted on ESO's Very Large Telescope. The image sharpening corresponds to seeing details about 300 kilometers wide on the surface of the giant planet. The observations were done at infrared wavelengths where absorption due to hydrogen and methane is strong. This absorption means that light can be reflected back only from high-altitude hazes, and not from deeper clouds. These hazes lie in the very stable upper part of Jupiter's troposphere, where pressures are between 0.15 and 0.3 bar. Mixing is weak within this stable region, so tiny haze particles can survive for days to years, depending on their size and fall speed. Additionally, near the planet's poles, a higher stratospheric haze (light blue regions) is generated by interactions with particles trapped in Jupiter's intense magnetic field. Credit: ESO/F. Marchis, M. Wong, E. Marchetti, P. Amico, S. Tordo |
| Chancellor Robert J. Birgeneau | |
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6.7Mb JPG Credit: John Blaustein photo |
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6.5Mb JPG Credit: John Blaustein photo |
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