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Offshore marine visualization

Chapman, Paul M. (Computer scientist)

Authors

Paul M. (Computer scientist) Chapman



Contributors

Derek Wills
Supervisor

Abstract

In 85 B.C. a Greek philosopher called Posidonius set sail to answer an age-old question: how deep is the ocean? By lowering a large rock tied to a very long length of rope he determined that the ocean was 2km deep. These line and sinker methods were used until the 1920s when oceanographers developed the first echo sounders that could measure the water's depth by reflecting sound waves off the seafloor. The subsequent increase in sonar depth soundings resulted in oceanologists finally being able to view the alien underwater landscape. Paper printouts and records dominated the industry for decades until the mid 1980s when new digital sonar systems enabled computers to process and render the captured data streams.

In the last five years, the offshore industry has been particularly slow to take advantage of the significant advancements made in computer and graphics technologies. Contemporary marine visualization systems still use outdated 2D representations of vessels positioned on digital charts and the potential for using 3D computer graphics for interacting with multidimensional marine data has not been fully investigated.

This thesis is concerned with the issues surrounding the visualization of offshore activities and data using interactive 3D computer graphics. It describes the development of a novel 3D marine visualization system and subsequent study of marine visualization techniques through a number of offshore case studies that typify the marine industry. The results of this research demonstrate that presenting the offshore engineer or office based manager with a more intuitive and natural 3D computer generated viewing environment enables complex offshore tasks, activities and procedures to be more readily monitored and understood. The marine visualizations presented in this thesis take advantage of recent advancements in computer graphics technology and our extraordinary ability to interpret 3D data. These visual enhancements have improved offshore staffs' spatial and temporal understanding of marine data resulting in improved planning, decision making and real-time situation awareness of complex offshore data and activities.

Citation

Chapman, P. M. (. S. (2003). Offshore marine visualization. (Thesis). University of Hull. Retrieved from https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4213889

Thesis Type Thesis
Deposit Date Mar 11, 2013
Publicly Available Date Feb 22, 2023
Keywords Computer science
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4213889
Additional Information Department of Computer Science, The University of Hull
Award Date Dec 1, 2003

Files

Thesis (56.9 Mb)
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Copyright Statement
© 2003 Chapman, Paul M. (Computer scientist). All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the copyright holder.




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