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  2. WET (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WET_(company)

    The Fountain contains 6,600 underwater lights which can be seen from space more than 200 miles away. It was also in 2009 that the company was commissioned to create five fountains for the Las Vegas City Center. One fountain was the world's first choreographed ice feature with another being the world's widest programmable water wall. [24]

  3. Dive light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dive_light

    They are generally not important for dive safety, but are required for the video camera to get an acceptable image quality, either for video recording, or for the surface team to monitor the work done by the diver. Modern underwater video lights are now relatively small, have run times of 45–60 minutes and output 600–8000 lumens.

  4. Mark W. Fuller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_W._Fuller

    Fuller was born and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah.While he was in junior high school, he built a small pond in the backyard of his parents' house. [1] Fuller first visited Disneyland when he was fourteen, and was inspired to expand the fish pond with lagoons and underwater tunnels, using an old washing machine pump. [2]

  5. Water garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_garden

    Elements such as fountains, statues, artificial waterfalls, boulders, underwater lighting, lining treatments, edging details, watercourses, and in-water and bankside planting can add visual interest and help to integrate the water garden with the local landscape and environment.

  6. Fountains of Bellagio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fountains_of_Bellagio

    Fountains of Bellagio (/ b ə ˈ l ɒ ʒ i. oʊ / bə-LAH-zhi-oh) is a free attraction at the Bellagio resort, located on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It consists of a musical fountain show performed in an 8.5-acre (3.4 ha) man-made lake in front of the resort. The show uses 1,214 water nozzles and 4,792 lights. The fountains shoot ...

  7. Snell's window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snell's_window

    Snell's window (also called Snell's circle [1] or optical man-hole [2]) is a phenomenon by which an underwater viewer sees everything above the surface through a cone of light of width of about 96 degrees. [3] This phenomenon is caused by refraction of light entering water, and is governed by Snell's Law. [4]