IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics (IEEE Visualization), 2020
In recent years, deep learning has opened countless research opportunities across many different disciplines. At present, visualization is mainly applied to explore and explain neural networks. Its counterpart-the application of deep learning to visualization problems-requires us to share data more openly in order to enable more scientists to engage in data-driven research. In this paper, we construct a large fluid flow data set and apply it to a deep learning problem in scientific visualization. Parameterized by the Reynolds number, the data set contains a wide spectrum of laminar and turbulent fluid flow regimes. The full data set was simulated on a high-performance compute cluster and contains 8000 time-dependent 2D vector fields, accumulating to more than 16 TB in size. Using our public fluid data set, we trained deep convolutional neural networks in order to set a benchmark for an improved post-hoc Lagrangian fluid flow analysis. In in-situ settings, flow maps are exported and interpolated in order to assess the transport characteristics of time-dependent fluids. Using deep learning, we improve the accuracy of flow map interpolations, allowing a more precise flow analysis at a reduced memory IO footprint.
@article{Jakob20SciVis,
author = {Jakob, Jakob and Gross, Markus and G{\"u}nther, Tobias},
title = {A Fluid Flow Data Set for Machine Learning and its Application to Neural Flow Map Interpolation},
journal = {IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics (IEEE Visualization)},
volume = {27},
number = {2},
pages = {1279-1289},
year = {2020},
publisher = {IEEE},
address = {Salt Lake City, United States},
doi = {10.1109/TVCG.2020.3028947},
}