Title :
Accelerating large data analysis by exploiting regularities
Author :
Ellsworth, David ; Moran, Patrick J.
Author_Institution :
Adv. Manage. Technol. Inc., NASA Ames Res. Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA
Abstract :
We present techniques for discovering and exploiting regularity in large curvilinear data sets. The data can be based on a single mesh or a mesh composed of multiple submeshes (also known as zones). Multi-zone data are typical in Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations. Regularities include axis-aligned rectilinear and cylindrical meshes as well as cases where one zone is equivalent to a rigid body transformation of another. Our algorithms can also discover rigid-body motion of meshes in time-series data. Next, we describe a data model where we can utilize the results from the discovery process in order to accelerate large data visualizations. Where possible, we replace general curvilinear zones with rectilinear or cylindrical zones. In rigid-body motion cases, we replace a time-series of meshes with a transformed mesh object where a reference mesh is dynamically transformed based on a given time value in order to satisfy geometry requests, on demand. The data model enables us to make these substitutions and dynamic transformations transparently with respect to the visualization algorithms. We present results with large data sets where we combine our mesh replacement and transformation techniques with out-of-core paging in order to achieve analysis speedups ranging from 1.5 to 2.
Keywords :
data analysis; data models; data visualisation; object-oriented programming; C++ language; CFD simulation; computational fluid dynamics; curvilinear data sets; cylindrical meshes; data analysis; data models; data visualization; demand-driven evaluation; large data sets; mesh replacement; mesh replacements; mesh rigid-body motion discovery; mesh transformation; multizone data; object-oriented methods; out-of-core paging; regularity finding; rigid body motion; scientific visualization; time series; time-series data; visualization algorithms; Acceleration; Algorithm design and analysis; Computational fluid dynamics; Data analysis; Data models; Data visualization; Interpolation; NASA; Pattern analysis; Postal services;
Conference_Titel :
Visualization, 2003. VIS 2003. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8120-3
DOI :
10.1109/VISUAL.2003.1250420