Index

Acting



Composing












Fluxing






Inhabiting





Metamorphosing




Navigating







Othering




Processing










Regulating










Resonating













Agency
Environing

Landing


Blackboxing
Cosmology
Cosmotechnics
Cosmogram
Cosmopolitics

Envelope
Figure-Ground
Immanence
Institution
Network
New Climatic Regime

Biosphere
Entropy
Great Acceleration
Protocol

Technosphere
Tipping Point


Critical Zone
Earthbound
Habitat
Oikos
Territory

Animism
Holobiont
Strata
Vital Materialism

Anthropocene
Deep Time
Global
Multiplicity
Planetary
Pluriverse
Terrestrial


Ghost Acreage
Modernity
Substitute
Zomia

Computation
Internet of Things
Layer
Model
Operational
Representational
res extensa
Scale
Simulation
Tabula Rasa


Contingency

Cybernetics
Earth System
Feedback Loop
Gaia
Gaia Device
Heterarchy

Recursivity
Stay-Out Zones
World-systems

Futurity
Horizon

Image
Resolution
Sample
Sensor
Synchronisation


Term Stay-Out Zones
Contributor Lucia Rebolino

In spectrum management, Stay-Out Zones are designated frequency bands allocated to prevent interference between different users, applications, or technologies. These zones play a crucial role in maintaining clear communication channels for specialized uses, particularly in protecting scientific and environmental monitoring from interference by commercial telecommunications like 5G networks. Stay-Out Zones are especially important for scientific instruments that rely on precise atmospheric data, such as satellite-based weather forecasting systems, radar, and environmental sensors, which detect subtle signals necessary for tracking phenomena like water vapor levels, storm patterns, and climate trends. By limiting the overlap between high-powered telecommunications signals and sensitive scientific instruments, Stay-Out Zones help maintain the integrity of critical data used in climate research and weather prediction. Without these protections, interference could compromise data accuracy, reducing our ability to model and predict extreme weather events.