|
We describe our visualization process for a particle-based simulation
of the formation of the first stars and their impact on cosmic
history. The dataset consists of several hundred time-steps of
point simulation data, each approximately 500MB in size. For each
time-step, we interpolate the point data onto a regular grid using a
method taken from the radiance estimate of photon mapping. We
import the resulting regular grid representation into ParaView,
with which we extract isosurfaces across multiple variables. Our
images provide insights into the evolution of the early universe,
tracing the cosmic transition from an initially homogeneous state
to one of increasing complexity. Specifically, our visualizations
capture the build-up of regions of ionized gas around the first stars,
their evolution, and their complex interactions with the surrounding
matter. These phenomena were not clearly visible with other
visualization techniques. These observations will guide the upcoming
James Webb Space Telescope, the key astronomy mission of the
next decade.
|
|
Paper (PDF 224K) |
![]() Hydrogen density movie (MPEG-4 1.4M) |
![]() Molecular density movie (MPEG-4 1.5M) |
@TechReport{ Navratil:2007:VCP,
author = {Paul Arthur Navr\'{a}til and Jarrett L. Johnson and Volker Bromm},
title = {Visualization of Cosmological Point-Based Datasets},
institution = {The University of Texas at Austin},
year = {2007},
number = {TR-07-16},
month = {March 27}
}