Lagrangian–Eulerian advection

In scientific visualization, Lagrangian–Eulerian advection is a technique mainly used for the visualization of unsteady flows. The computer graphics generated by the technique can help scientists visualize changes in velocity fields. This technique uses a hybrid Lagrangian and Eulerian specification of the flow field. It is a special case of a line integral convolution.

The method consists of using nearest-neighbour interpolation followed by an error correction mechanism.[1] The Lagrangian specification is used during the integration[2] to update the particle positions. The property of interest is advected in the Eulerian frame of reference.[3] It was originally designed by Bruno Jobard and others for steady flows but was extended to unsteady flows.[4]

The main idea is to create a white noise texture of the desired resolution, which is used as a base, on top of which the vector field can be applied. That means for every particle looking backward in the vector field to find out the new value for the cell it is contained in. Then looking forward – to calculate the new position of the particle in the cell.

In its application, the Lagrangian–Eulerian method can be accelerated using the GPUs used in common chipsets present in Nvidia and ATI Radeon graphics cards.[5]

Ensuring that the moving texture always follows the velocity field of the fluid, while maintaining properties of the original texture, is key to avoid visual artifacts. A new method developed in 2009 improves the results of the previous one, running real-time.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Weiskopf, Daniel (2006). GPU-Based interactive visualization techniques. p. 105. ISBN 9783540332626.
  2. ^ Jobard, Bruno; Erlebacher, Gordon; Hussaini, M. Yousuff (2002). "Lagrangian–Eulerian Advection of Noise and Dye Textures for Unsteady Flow Visualization" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 8 (3): 211–222. doi:10.1109/TVCG.2002.1021575.
  3. ^ Weiskopf, Daniel; Erlebacher, Gordon (2005). "Chapter 12 – Overview of flow visualization". In Hansen, Charles; Johnson, Christopher (eds.). The Visualization Handbook. p. 270. ISBN 9780123875822.
  4. ^ Li, Guo-Shi. Interactive Texture Based Flow Visualization. p. 21. ISBN 9783540250760.
  5. ^ Weiskopf, Daniel; Erlebacher, Gordon; Hopf, Matthias; Ertl, Thomas (2002). "Hardware-accelerated Langrangian–Eulerian texture advection for 2D Flow". In Greiner, Günther (ed.). Vision, Modeling, and Visualization 2002. IOS Press. pp. 77–84. ISBN 9783898380348.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) Preprint: A Case Study on Hardware-Accelerated Lagrangian–Eulerian Texture Advection for Flow Visualization
  6. ^ Yu, Qizhi; Neyret, Fabrice; Bruneton, Eric; Holzschuch, Nicolas (2009). "Spectrum-preserving texture advection for animated fluids". INRIA. Paper on Research Gate: [1]


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