Center for Environmental and Applied Fluid Mechanics




.
Weekly Seminar
Home
Weekly Seminar

Annual Symposium
CEAFM Dual Degree Program
Members
Contact

Weekly Seminar: Spring 2008

Date: February 15
TALK CANCELLED

Time: 11:00 AM
Location: Maryland Hall 110
Speaker: Dr. John Clyne
National Center for Atmospheric Research
Title:"VAPOR: A desktop environment for interactive exploration of large scale CFD simulation data"

Abstract

Emerging petascale computing platforms promise unprecedented opportunities for large-scale numerical simulation, but will also pose extraordinary challenges for data analysis and visualization. While CPU and GPU performance has advanced at a rate meeting or exceeding Moore’s law, other computing technologies, notably storage bandwidths, have lagged far behind. Frequently the bottleneck in interactive exploration of time-evolving simulation outputs is not the speed at which the CPU or GPU can process them, but simply the rate at which we can recover the data from disk. While massively parallel visualization and analysis platforms have been shown to be capable of operating on some of the largest data sets generated today these systems are costly, difficult to maintain, lack robust application software environments, and are available only to a fortunate few. We have chosen a different path to addressing the problem of visualizing and analyzing large data. Instead of relying on brute force computing we employ an intelligent wavelet based encoding strategy that permits hierarchical data access, permitting researchers to make speed/quality tradeoffs to accommodate the resources at hand. Highly interactively visual and quantitative analysis of data sets up to 20483 have been demonstrated with our methods using only a single workstation. We have incorporated our technique into an open source, community CFD analysis tool, VAPOR (www.vapor.ucar.edu), now used by researchers worldwide. In addition to its unique data representation, also distinctive to VAPOR are its quantitative analysis capabilities and its domain specific focus on the CFD community. In this talk I will give an overview of VAPOR and its current data analysis capabilities. I will also discuss development plans and research directions focused on supporting future petascale computing. 






Upcoming Seminar

Dr. Olivier LeMaitre
September 12th, 2008
11:00 a.m.
Maryland Hall 110
"Spectral methods for uncertainty quantification in fluid flow simulations"

More information »