Computer scientists at the University of California San Diego have developed a groundbreaking method for generating highly realistic computer-generated images of fluid dynamics, in elements such as smoke.
This research, conducted by the UC San Diego Center for Visual Computing, was presented at the prestigious SIGGRAPH Asia 2024 conference, where it received a Best Paper Honorable Mention for its contributions to computer graphics and physics-based simulation.
To demonstrate the power of their approach, the team compared an iconic photograph from the 1980 eruption of Mount Saint Helens volcano in Washington State, to a computer-generated rendering of a volcanic smoke plume created using their new method. The resulting simulation captures the intricate, multi-scale billowing of the smoke plume, including its twisting, curling motion and delicate turbulence, which are hallmarks of realistic fluid behavior.
Such visually complex features are challenging to reproduce with traditional methods because they demand extremely high computational resolution to capture fine details accurately. Achieving this level of realism with conventional approaches would require impractically large amounts of computational power and time, making them unsuitable for many practical applications.
This work introduces a more efficient approach that opens the door to increasingly realistic simulations while significantly reducing computational costs. By preserving the physical properties of fluid motion, such as energy and circulation, the method allows for accurate representations of natural phenomena that can be used for scientific verification and analysis, such as understanding smoke dispersion or atmospheric dynamics. At the same time, it provides a powerful tool for generating high-quality computer-generated imagery (CGI) for entertainment purposes, such as movies, video games, and virtual reality, where realism and efficiency are equally critical.
Read entire article here:
today.ucsd.edu/story/this-new-advanced-method-produces-highly-realistic-simulations-of-fluid-dynamics
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