Distributed visualization at Los Alamos National Laboratory

Several approaches to visualizing simulated data are described. It is noted that a centralized video animation facility represents the state of the art in scientific visualization, but is too expensive to replicate widely. Methods used at LANL for connecting supercomputers with display units, ranging from dumb terminals to powerful workstations, are also described. Of particular interest is the Scientific Visualization Workbench, an inexpensive and effective way of using 'televisualization' to move data from supercomputer to user and to modify the user's display. The implication of higher speed networks are discussed.<<ETX>>

[1]  Gabor Herman,et al.  Display of 3-D Digital Images: Computational Foundations and Medical Applications , 1983, IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications.

[2]  P. Woodward,et al.  A Numerical Laboratory , 1987 .

[3]  Pat Hanrahan,et al.  Volume Rendering , 2020, Definitions.

[4]  B. H. McCormick,et al.  Visualization in scientific computing , 1995 .

[5]  Craig Upson,et al.  V-buffer: visible volume rendering , 1988, SIGGRAPH.

[6]  David Wicinas Black Hole Research , 1987, IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications.