Title :
Real-time visualization of the East China Sea based on priceton ocean model and volume rendering
Author :
Wei, Liangying ; Xu, Huiping ; Liu, Ding
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Ocean & Earth Sci., Tongji Univ., Shanghai, China
Abstract :
This paper presents a real-time three dimensional visualization system of the East China Sea, composed by an ocean model with volume rendering technology and a marine GIS system. In the system, the spatiotemporal marine data of East China Sea is retrieved from an ocean modeling called the Princeton Ocean Model (POM), which is a sigma coordinate, free surface ocean model with embedded turbulence and wave submodels, and wet-dry capability. The East China Sea model is implemented on a 1/15 ° × 1/15 ° horizontal curvilinear orthogonal grid with 16 sigma levels. The system rewrites the Princeton Ocean Model on C#.net to provide a whole control upon the model. In the rewritten POM code, data calculated from every time step is transferred to the drawing module for the real time visualization; also, users can in turn modulate parameters and setups of the model or reload initial and boundary conditions during the simulation any time they want to. The paper puts its emphasis on the visualization of the three dimensional physical data-fields of the East China Sea, in which the three dimensional physical data comes from every single internal time step while two dimensional physical data like surface elevation comes from every single external time step. With the data calculated, the virtual environment is established on modern OpenGL rendering techniques complex. Volume rendering technology as well as its optimal methods is used to rebuild the three-dimensional ocean data-fields. GPU techniques and C for graphics (Cg) are also used for a better perform of the volume rendering. Finally, the ocean model and its visualization are integrated into a marine GIS system. The system is trying not only to reveal a realistic ocean environment of the East China Sea, but also to reproduce the scene of the distribution of the three dimensional physical scalar data (e.g. temperature) to the life.
Keywords :
geographic information systems; ocean temperature; ocean waves; oceanographic techniques; real-time systems; turbulence; 3D real-time visualization; East China Sea; GPU techniques; OpenGL rendering techniques; Priceton ocean model; horizontal curvilinear orthogonal grid; marine geographic information system; ocean temperature; surface elevation; time step; turbulence submodel; volume rendering technology; wave submodel; Data visualization; Image color analysis; Numerical models; Ocean temperature; Rendering (computer graphics); Sea surface; East Ocean Sea; POM; marine GIS; ray casting; visualization; volume rendering;
Conference_Titel :
Geoinformatics, 2010 18th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Beijing
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7301-4
DOI :
10.1109/GEOINFORMATICS.2010.5567985