DocumentCode
1865696
Title
Case study: visualizing ocean currents with color and dithering
Author
Crossno, Patricia ; Angel, Edward ; Munich, David
Author_Institution
Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fYear
2001
fDate
23-23 Oct. 2001
Firstpage
37
Lastpage
147
Abstract
This case study presents several related approaches to visualizing flow information from large vector volumes generated by ocean circulation modeling. Flow vectors are mapped to colored pixels to enable global views of dense three-dimensional vector fields. Each of the approaches starts by classifying vector direction into a small number of colors. One approach then uses scaled linear interpolation to blend between adjacent directional colors. Two other approaches use half-toning and dithering methods to rapidly display flow information. By using opponent colors for our directional encoding, we can blend colors, either through linear interpolation or the user´s visual system, into intermediate colors without expressly calculating them by a conversion to polar coordinates.
Keywords
data visualisation; flow visualisation; geophysics computing; oceanographic techniques; bitmap; color mapping; dithering; flow information visualisation; half-toning; ocean currents; vector field visualization; Application software; Computational modeling; Computer aided software engineering; Computer graphics; Data visualization; Encoding; High performance computing; Interpolation; Oceans; Vectors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Parallel and Large-Data Visualization and Graphics, 2001. Proceedings. IEEE 2001 Symposium on
Conference_Location
San Diego, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7223-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVGS.2001.964401
Filename
964401
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