DocumentCode
1818487
Title
Object-space ambient occlusion for molecular dynamics
Author
Grottel, Sebastian ; Krone, Michael ; Scharnowski, Katrin ; Ertl, Thomas
Author_Institution
Visualization Res. Center, Univ. of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany
fYear
2012
fDate
Feb. 28 2012-March 2 2012
Firstpage
209
Lastpage
216
Abstract
In many different application fields particle-based simulation, like molecular dynamics, are used to study material properties and behavior. Nowadays, simulation data sets consist of millions of particles and thousands of time steps challenging interactive visualization. Direct glyph-based representations of the particle data are important for the visual analysis process and these rendering methods can be optimized to be able to work sufficiently fast with huge data sets. However, the perception of the implicit spatial structures formed by such data is often hindered by aliasing and visual clutter. Especially the depth of these structures can be grasped better if visual cues are applied, even in interactive representations. We hence present a method to apply object-space ambient occlusion, based on local neighborhood information, to large timedependent particle-based data sets without the need for any precomputations. Based on density information collected in real-time, glyph-based representations of the data sets can be visually enhanced without significant impact on the rendering performance allowing to visualize multi-million particle data sets interactively on commodity workstations.
Keywords
digital simulation; materials properties; molecular dynamics method; physics computing; rendering (computer graphics); commodity workstations; density information; direct glyph-based representations; huge data sets; implicit spatial structures; interactive representations; interactive visualization; large timedependent particle-based data sets; local neighborhood information; material behavior; material properties; molecular dynamics; multimillion particle data set visualization; object-space ambient occlusion; particle-based simulation; real-time data sets; rendering methods; simulation data sets; visual analysis process; Data visualization; Equations; Geometry; Graphics processing unit; Mathematical model; Rendering (computer graphics); Visualization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Visualization Symposium (PacificVis), 2012 IEEE Pacific
Conference_Location
Songdo
ISSN
2165-8765
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-0863-2
Electronic_ISBN
2165-8765
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PacificVis.2012.6183593
Filename
6183593
Link To Document