 In this example, we're gonna make a ruster query for a square area. So essentially, we're gonna look at the population density in Europe. So to do so, we launch a new query. The data layer we're interested in is from the service set and is here just at the top, the global population density. So for the where, we simply paint a rectangle onto the map, some area roughly like this, or less Europe. So for the where, it's actually very straightforward. We just interested in the signal timestamp, so we just picked this 2015 as suggested. There's no aggregation necessary, so we can complete this after giving it a name. And then we can submit this to the system. So this is gonna run now, but we can simply look at the essentially same query that we prepared earlier for this example, so you see this down here. So to click on it, now you see, this is sort of what we would expect. There's several things to say about this. So what is actually kind of relevant here is that we can use the settings to change at color scale, okay? So natively, you see there's a bunch of areas that go into saturation. If we're interested in more detail there, apart from zooming in, we can take the settings and change the maximum value where saturation occurs to, for example, 500 people per square kilometer. So once we do this, you see, now the color scheme changes a bit and we see a much more structured. Therefore, the price we pay for this is that in areas of low population, things obviously not as fine-grained anymore. So if you compare sort of this area up here to what's happening here and sort of maybe in northern Spain, there's not that much information available there. So one has to basically adjust the color scale here a bit to highlight the areas one is most interested in.