Refine
Year of publication
- 2019 (2) (remove)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2)
Language
- English (2)
Has Fulltext
- yes (2)
Keywords
- Topology (2) (remove)
Faculty / Organisational entity
Visualization is vital to the scientific discovery process.
An interactive high-fidelity rendering provides accelerated insight into complex structures, models and relationships.
However, the efficient mapping of visualization tasks to high performance architectures is often difficult, being subject to a challenging mixture of hardware and software architectural complexities in combination with domain-specific hurdles.
These difficulties are often exacerbated on heterogeneous architectures.
In this thesis, a variety of ray casting-based techniques are developed and investigated with respect to a more efficient usage of heterogeneous HPC systems for distributed visualization, addressing challenges in mesh-free rendering, in-situ compression, task-based workload formulation, and remote visualization at large scale.
A novel direct raytracing scheme for on-the-fly free surface reconstruction of particle-based simulations using an extended anisoptropic kernel model is investigated on different state-of-the-art cluster setups.
The versatile system renders up to 170 million particles on 32 distributed compute nodes at close to interactive frame rates at 4K resolution with ambient occlusion.
To address the widening gap between high computational throughput and prohibitively slow I/O subsystems, in situ topological contour tree analysis is combined with a compact image-based data representation to provide an effective and easy-to-control trade-off between storage overhead and visualization fidelity.
Experiments show significant reductions in storage requirements, while preserving flexibility for exploration and analysis.
Driven by an increasingly heterogeneous system landscape, a flexible distributed direct volume rendering and hybrid compositing framework is presented.
Based on a task-based dynamic runtime environment, it enables adaptable performance-oriented deployment on various platform configurations.
Comprehensive benchmarks with respect to task granularity and scaling are conducted to verify the characteristics and potential of the novel task-based system design.
A core challenge of HPC visualization is the physical separation of visualization resources and end-users.
Using more tiles than previously thought reasonable, a distributed, low-latency multi-tile streaming system is demonstrated, being able to sustain a stable 80 Hz when streaming up to 256 synchronized 3840x2160 tiles and achieve 365 Hz at 3840x2160 for sort-first compositing over the internet, thereby enabling lightweight visualization clients and leaving all the heavy lifting to the remote supercomputer.
The focus of this work is to provide and evaluate a novel method for multifield topology-based analysis and visualization. Through this concept, called Pareto sets, one is capable to identify critical regions in a multifield with arbitrary many individual fields. It uses ideas found in graph optimization to find common behavior and areas of divergence between multiple optimization objectives. The connections between the latter areas can be reduced into a graph structure allowing for an abstract visualization of the multifield to support data exploration and understanding.
The research question that is answered in this dissertation is about the general capability and expandability of the Pareto set concept in context of visualization and application. Furthermore, the study of its relations, drawbacks and advantages towards other topological-based approaches. This questions is answered in several steps, including consideration and comparison with related work, a thorough introduction of the Pareto set itself as well as a framework for efficient implementation and an attached discussion regarding limitations of the concept and their implications for run time, suitable data, and possible improvements.
Furthermore, this work considers possible simplification approaches like integrated single-field simplification methods but also using common structures identified through the Pareto set concept to smooth all individual fields at once. These considerations are especially important for real-world scenarios to visualize highly complex data by removing small local structures without destroying information about larger, global trends.
To further emphasize possible improvements and expandability of the Pareto set concept, the thesis studies a variety of different real world applications. For each scenario, this work shows how the definition and visualization of the Pareto set is used and improved for data exploration and analysis based on the scenarios.
In summary, this dissertation provides a complete and sound summary of the Pareto set concept as ground work for future application of multifield data analysis. The possible scenarios include those presented in the application section, but are found in a wide range of research and industrial areas relying on uncertainty analysis, time-varying data, and ensembles of data sets in general.