Designers at NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
work alongside researchers and scientists to create high-quality, engaging
animations and visualizations of data. This animation shows global carbon
dioxide emissions forming and circling the planet.
Credit: NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio
Captivating images and videos can bring data to life. NASA’s Scientific
Visualization Studio (SVS) produces visualizations, animations, and images to
help scientists tell stories of their research and make science more
approachable and engaging.
Using the Discover supercomputer at
the Center for Climate Simulation at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland, visualizers use datasets generated by supercomputer models
to create highly detailed, accurate, and stunning visualizations with Hollywood
filmmaking tools like 3D modeling and animation.
Using supercomputing models, SVS visualizers created this data-driven animation of carbon dioxide emissions moving around the
planet. The visualization is driven by massive climate data sets and highly
detailed emissions maps created by NASA researchers and external partners. The
resulting visualization shows the impact of power plants, fires, and cities,
and how their emissions are spread across the planet by weather patterns and
airflow.
“Both policymakers and scientists
try to account for where carbon comes from and how that impacts the planet,”
said NASA Goddard climate scientist Lesley Ott, whose research was used to
generate the final visualization. “You see here how everything is interconnected
by the different weather patterns.”
By combining visual storytelling
with supercomputing power, the SVS team continues their work to captivate and
connect with audiences while educating them on NASA’s scientific research and
efforts.
The NASA Center for Climate Simulation is part of the NASA High-End Computing Program, which also includes the NASA Advanced Supercomputing Facility at Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley.
By: Tara Friesen
Source: Hollywood Techniques Help NASA Visualize Supercomputing Data - NASA
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