Vortex Visualization in Ultra Low Reynolds Number Insect Flight

IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics(2011)

Cited 43|Views0
No score
Abstract
We present the visual analysis of a biologically inspired CFD simulation of the deformable flapping wings of a dragonfly as it takes off and begins to maneuver, using vortex detection and integration-based flow lines. The additional seed placement and perceptual challenges introduced by having multiple dynamically deforming objects in the highly unsteady 3D flow domain are addressed. A brief overview of the high speed photogrammetry setup used to capture the dragonfly takeoff, parametric surfaces used for wing reconstruction, CFD solver and underlying flapping flight theory is presented to clarify the importance of several unsteady flight mechanisms, such as the leading edge vortex, that are captured visually. A novel interactive seed placement method is used to simplify the generation of seed curves that stay in the vicinity of relevant flow phenomena as they move with the flapping wings. This method allows a user to define and evaluate the quality of a seed's trajectory over time while working with a single time step. The seed curves are then used to place particles, streamlines and generalized streak lines. The novel concept of flowing seeds is also introduced in order to add visual context about the instantaneous vector fields surrounding smoothly animate streak lines. Tests show this method to be particularly effective at visually capturing vortices that move quickly or that exist for a very brief period of time. In addition, an automatic camera animation method is used to address occlusion issues caused when animating the immersed wing boundaries alongside many geometric flow lines. Each visualization method is presented at multiple time steps during the up-stroke and down-stroke to highlight the formation, attachment and shedding of the leading edge vortices in pairs of wings. Also, the visualizations show evidence of wake capture at stroke reversal which suggests the existence of previously unknown unsteady lift generation mechanisms that are unique to qua- wing insects.
More
Translated text
Key words
biology computing,computational fluid dynamics,computer animation,data visualisation,flow visualisation,vortices,wakes,zoology,CFD simulation,automatic camera animation method,deformable flapping wing,down-stroke,dragonfly,flapping flight theory,geometric flow lines,insect flight,integration-based flow lines,interactive seed placement method,leading edge vortex,occlusion issues,parametric surfaces,perceptual challenges,photogrammetry setup,seed curve generation,ultra low Reynolds number,unsteady 3D flow domain,unsteady flight mechanism,up-stroke,visual analysis,visualization method,vortex detection,vortex visualization,wake,wing reconstruction,Flow visualization,flowing seed points,insect flight,streak lines,streamlines,unsteady flow.,vortex visualization
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined