Browsing by Author "Rössl, C."
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item A Modified Double Gyre with Ground Truth Hyperbolic Trajectories for Flow Visualization(© 2021 Eurographics ‐ The European Association for Computer Graphics and John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2021) Wolligandt, S.; Wilde, T.; Rössl, C.; Theisel, H.; Benes, Bedrich and Hauser, HelwigThe model of a flow by Shadden et al. is a standard benchmark data set for the computation of hyperbolic Lagrangian Coherent Structures (LCS) in flow data. While structurally extremely simple, it generates hyperbolic LCS of arbitrary complexity. Unfortunately, the does not come with a well‐defined ground truth: the location of hyperbolic LCS boundaries can only be approximated by numerical methods that usually involve the gradient of the flow map. We present a new benchmark data set that is a small but carefully designed modification of the , which comes with ground truth closed‐form hyperbolic trajectories. This allows for computing hyperbolic LCS boundaries by a simple particle integration without the consideration of the flow map gradient. We use these hyperbolic LCS as a ground truth solution for testing an existing numerical approach for extracting hyperbolic trajectories. In addition, we are able to construct hyperbolic LCS curves that are significantly longer than in existing numerical methods.Item On‐The‐Fly Tracking of Flame Surfaces for the Visual Analysis of Combustion Processes(© 2018 The Eurographics Association and John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2018) Oster, T.; Abdelsamie, A.; Motejat, M.; Gerrits, T.; Rössl, C.; Thévenin, D.; Theisel, H.; Chen, Min and Benes, BedrichThe visual analysis of combustion processes is one of the challenges of modern flow visualization. In turbulent combustion research, the behaviour of the flame surface contains important information about the interactions between turbulence and chemistry. The extraction and tracking of this surface is crucial for understanding combustion processes. This is impossible to realize as a post‐process because of the size of the involved datasets, which are too large to be stored on disk. We present an on‐the‐fly method for tracking the flame surface directly during simulation and computing the local tangential surface deformation for arbitrary time intervals. In a massively parallel simulation, the data are distributed over many processes and only a single time step is in memory at any time. To satisfy the demands on parallelism and accuracy posed by this situation, we track the surface with independent micro‐patches and adapt their distribution as needed to maintain numerical stability. With our method, we enable combustion researchers to observe the detailed movement and deformation of the flame surface over extended periods of time and thus gain novel insights into the mechanisms of turbulence–chemistry interactions. We validate our method on analytic ground truth data and show its applicability on two real‐world simulations.The visual analysis of combustion processes is one of the challenges of modern flow visualization. processes is one of the challenges of modern flow visualization. In turbulent combustion research, the behaviour of the flame surface contains important information about the interactions between turbulence and chemistry. The extraction and tracking of this surface is crucial for understanding combustion processes. This is impossible to realize as a post‐process because of the size of the involved datasets, which are too large to be stored on disk. We present an on‐the‐fly method for tracking the flame surface directly during simulation and computing the local tangential surface deformation for arbitrary time intervals. In a massively parallel simulation, the data are distributed over many processes and only a single time step is in memory at any time. To satisfy the demands on parallelism and accuracy posed by this situation, we track the surface with independent micro‐patches and adapt their distribution as needed to maintain numerical stability.