Extraction of Crack-free Isosurfaces from Adaptive Mesh Refinement Data

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Date
2001
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Eurographics Association
Abstract
Adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) is a numerical simulation technique used in computational fluid dynamics (CFD). It permits the efficient simulation of phenomena characterized by substantially varying scales in complexity of local behavior of certain variables. By using a set of nested grids at different resolutions, AMR combines the simplicity of structured rectilinear grids with the possibility to adapt to local changes in complexity and spatial resolution. Hierarchical representations of scientific data pose challenges when isosurfaces are extracted. Cracks can arise at the boundaries between regions represented at different resolutions. We present a method for the extraction of isosurfaces from AMR data that avoids cracks at the boundaries between levels of different resolution.
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@inproceedings{
:10.2312/VisSym/VisSym01/025-034
, booktitle = {
Eurographics / IEEE VGTC Symposium on Visualization
}, editor = {
David S. Ebert and Jean M. Favre and Ronald Peikert
}, title = {{
Extraction of Crack-free Isosurfaces from Adaptive Mesh Refinement Data
}}, author = {
Weber, Gunther H.
and
Kreylos, Oliver
and
Ligocki, Terry J.
and
Shalf, John M.
and
Hagen, Hans
and
Hamann, Bernd
and
Joy, Kenneth I.
}, year = {
2001
}, publisher = {
The Eurographics Association
}, ISSN = {
1727-5296
}, ISBN = {
3-211-83674-8
}, DOI = {
/10.2312/VisSym/VisSym01/025-034
} }
Citation