Christine Michel
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
250 Papers
1.4K Citations
Christine Michel is an academic researcher from Fisheries and Oceans Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sea ice & Arctic. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 246 publications. Previous affiliations of Christine Michel include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of Lyon.
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Papers
Seasonal variability of light absorption properties and water optical constituents in Hudson Bay, Canada
TL;DR: In this article, seasonal variability of light absorption coefficients and water optical constituents is observed in the central part of the bay, while less variability is observed near the coast, while a smaller contribution of accessory pigments to total pigments in the summer than in the fall, resulting in a lower blue-to-red phytoplankton absorption ratio.
22
Fracture numérique chez les seniors du 4eme age. Observation d'une acculturation technique
Christine Michel,Marc-Eric Bobillier-Chaumon,Franck Tarpin-Bernard +2 more
- 01 Jan 2009
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the numerical service offer to very old perople and see how it takes part in a social justice according to the definition of Rawls (principle of equal freedom, principle of equal opportunity in the access).
22
Temporal and spatial variability in sea-ice carbon:nitrogen ratios on Canadian Arctic shelves
Andrea Niemi,Christine Michel +1 more
- 02 Dec 2015
TL;DR: In this paper, a large data set of particulate organic carbon (POC) and nitrogen (PON) measurements in first-year bottom sea ice (n = 257) from two Arctic shelves, the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and Beaufort Sea shelf, including dark winter and spring seasonal measurements.
20
Beam attenuation, scattering and backscattering of marine particles in relation to particle size distribution and composition in Hudson Bay (Canada)
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relationship between the concentration of biogeochemical parameters and particulate beam attenuation (cp), scattering (bp), and backscattering (bbp) in Hudson Bay and found that most of the variability resulted from the presence of a deep chlorophyll maximum.
19
DDART, a Dynamic Dashboard for Collection, Analysis and Visualization of Activity and Reporting Traces
Min Ji,Christine Michel,Elise Lavoué,Sébastien George +3 more
- 16 Sep 2014
TL;DR: A framework and a dynamic dashboard for PBL situations are proposed to help learners to collect, analyze and visualize the meaningful traces of their activities by them-selves.