* Exam Briefings and Task Approach boxes tell students what they need to know about each task type and how to tackle it * Extra grammar, vocabulary and writing practice in the end section can be used for class work or self-study * Key Language Bank provides essential reinforcement of problematic lan
Focus on Scientific Visualization
β Scribed by Frits H. Post, Theo van Walsum (auth.), Hans Hagen, Heinrich MΓΌller, Gregory M. Nielson (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 393
- Series
- Computer Graphics: Systems and Applications
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
One of the important issues of Scientific Visualization is the utilization of the broad bandwidth of the human sensory system in steering and interpreting complex processes and simulations involving voluminous data sets across diverse scientific disciplines. This book presents the state-of-the-art in visualization techniques both as an overview for the inquiring scientist, and as a solid platform from which developers may extend existing techniques or devise new ones to meet the specific needs of their problems. A secondary goal in crafting this volume has been to provide a vehicle for teaching of state-of-the-art techniques in scientific visualization. The first part of the book covers the application areas fluid flow visualization in medicine, and environmental protection. The second set of chapters explain fundamentals of scientific visualization. It comprises contributions on data structuring and data administration, data modeling, and rendering. A final section is devoted to auditory representation of scientific data.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xx
Fluid Flow Visualization....Pages 1-40
Volume Visualization in Medicine: Techniques and Applications....Pages 41-71
Application of Visualization in Environmental Protection....Pages 73-83
Data Structures in Scientific Visualization....Pages 85-102
A Visualization-Based Model for a Scientific Database System....Pages 103-121
Volume Synthesis Principles....Pages 123-137
Surface Interpolation from Cross Sections....Pages 139-189
Modeling and Visualizing Volumetric and Surface-on-Surface Data....Pages 191-242
Curve and Surface Interrogation....Pages 243-258
Sorting for Polyhedron Compositing....Pages 259-268
Joining Volume with Surface Rendering....Pages 269-292
The Volume Priority Z-Buffer....Pages 293-304
A Fourier Technique for Volume Rendering....Pages 305-316
An Improved Shading Algorithm for Radiosity Based Renderers....Pages 317-324
Some Annotations on X-ray Tracing....Pages 325-335
Auditory Representation of Scientific Data....Pages 337-346
Color Illustrations....Pages 347-368
Back Matter....Pages 369-379
β¦ Subjects
Simulation and Modeling; Computer Graphics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This lecture course is aimed at Masters, post-graduate students, young researchers in all disciplines involved in scientific work and interested in professional career. Each lecture contains theoretical and illustrative material helping learners deal with difficult areas of scientific paper componen
Pacific Focus
<p><p>This volume aims to stimulate discussions on research involving the use of data and digital images as an understanding approach for analysis and visualization of phenomena and experiments. The emphasis is put not only on graphically representing data as a way of increasing its visual analysis,
<p>Scientific visualization is a new and rapidly growing area in which efforts from computer graphics research and many scientific and engineering disciplines are integrated. Its aim is to enhance interpretation and understanding by scientists of large amounts of data from measurements or complex co