Festo AirJelly
Uploaded on Apr 22, 2008
Published on Oct 12, 2013
The family of the jellyfish or medusae are not only the most venomous ocean inhabitants but also some of the deepest divers. Medusae have been found as deep as 8.300 meters. Their existence is paramount to the oceans. Many of the large migrations of fish and mammals would not be possible without the existence of jellies. They are a crucial part of the food chain, many fish feed on jellies and in turn mammals or larger migratory predators feed on fish.The scientist Gerhard Jarms of the Zoological Institute of the University of Hamburg takes us on a journey into the exotic world of jellyfish. He is one of the most renowned medusae scientists in the world. Our expedition begins in the northern Atlantic where we will find the mysterious periphylla. We will continue on to the Azores in the Atlantic. There we will search for the XY jellies that seek shelter in caves in rough seas.
In the Pacific we will swim with the jellies in the famous Jellyfish Lake and last but not
least we will explore some of the world's most beautiful coral reefs of western Papua. And at the very end danger lurks around every corner as we set out to search off Australia's coast for the fatal sea wasp- one of the most poisonous ocean inhabitants. In the Pacific we will swim with the jellies in the famous Jellyfish Lake and last but not
least we will explore some of the world's most beautiful coral reefs of western Papua. And at the very end danger lurks around every corner as we set out to search off Australia's coast for the fatal sea wasp- one of the most poisonous ocean inhabitants.
Self-Repair in Jellyfish - Goentoro Lab at Caltech
Published on Jun 17, 2015
Researchers at the Goentoro Lab at the California Institute of Technology have discovered a previously unobserved self-repair mechanism in juvenile jellyfish. Paper: "Self-repairing symmetry in jellyfish through mechanically driven reorganization", published in the June 15th online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Contributors to this work include Michael Abrams, Ty Basinger, William Yuan, Chin-Lin Guo, and Lea Goentoro.
See the full news story:
"Injured Jellyfish Seek to Regain Symmetry"
by Jessica Stoller-Conrad
June 15, 2015
FCRAR 2016 Showcase: JenniFish: A Free-Swimming Robotic Jellyfish
Published on May 17, 2016
The JenniFish: A Free-Swimming Soft Robotic Jellyfish
Jennifer Frame, Oscar Curet and Erik Engeberg
Department of Ocean and Mechanical Engineering
Florida Atlantic University
Boca Raton, Florida
Entry to the Robot Showcase component of FCRAR 2016 (Florida Conference on Recent Advances in Robotics) by FAU.
FCRAR 2016 was held at FIU in Miami, Florida, on May 12-13, 2016.
JenniFish Ocean Test
Published on Jun 9, 2016
Florida International UniversityThis is a fun video compilation of the first round of ocean testing done with the JenniFish.
Electric Jellyfish Aquarium from ThinkGeek
Published on Mar 17, 2017
- 2 faux jellyfish illuminated with 18 LEDs "swim" with lifelike motion
- Set it to cycle through a series of colors or select a specific color: red, yellow, green, blue, violet
- Materials: Acrylic tank with plastic base and cap
- Manufacturer recommends using distilled water for best results
- Dimensions: 14" tall x ~ 5 1/2" diameter
- Weight: 8 3/4 lbs. (when filled)
- Includes tank and 100-240V 50/60Hz 0.2A AC Adapter with Type A electrical plug
- Automatically turns off after 4 hours (let the jellyfish rest an hour before restarting)
- Note: You must add 2-3 drops of liquid dish soap for the "swimming" motion
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