Waterar Here

In legal and environmental research, "" is a well-known term. It refers to water that exists in legal documents and rights but does not physically exist in the reservoirs or rivers due to overallocation.

: Using the refractive properties of water droplets to trigger AR content on a smartphone. 2. AR for Water Management & Visualization

There are several papers on using AR to "see" hidden water infrastructure: waterar

: Using sensors to detect ripples in real water and projecting digital "fish" or "waves" that react to the movement.

If you provide a few more details—like the authors, the specific technology (e.g., "water-resistant paper" or "underwater AR"), or where you heard the name—I can help you track down the exact paper. Over Allocation - California Water Impact Network In legal and environmental research, "" is a well-known term

: Using AR headsets (like HoloLens) to overlay 3D models of underground water pipes onto a street view for maintenance.

: Visualizing how rising water levels would impact a specific real-world neighborhood using geolocation. 3. "Paper Water" (Conceptual) Over Allocation - California Water Impact Network :

Researchers often experiment with using real water as a surface for AR. Projects like these focus on: