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Automatic Detection, Segmentation and Visualization of Mesoscale Eddies in MICOM Bin J. John CIS Dept, UMass Dartmouth.

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Presentation on theme: "Automatic Detection, Segmentation and Visualization of Mesoscale Eddies in MICOM Bin J. John CIS Dept, UMass Dartmouth."— Presentation transcript:

1 Automatic Detection, Segmentation and Visualization of Mesoscale Eddies in MICOM Bin J. John CIS Dept, UMass Dartmouth

2 Outline of talk b Mesoscale Eddies b MICOM Dataset b Detection of Eddies b Segmentation of Eddies b Visualization of extracted eddies b Conclusion & Future Work

3 Mesoscale Eddies b What are mesoscale Eddies? b Why are they important? b Why an automatic detection of eddies?

4 What are mesoscale eddies b Mesoscale: Size scale of about 100km b Eddies are energetic swirling currents found all over the ocean b Mesoscale eddies have deep roots of about 5km b They can transport momentum to the sea floor

5 Why are mesoscale eddies important? b Poleward Heat transport Heat moved by the from the equator towards polesHeat moved by the from the equator towards poles An important quantity in Climate StudiesAn important quantity in Climate Studies Oceans are partly responsible for poleward heat transportOceans are partly responsible for poleward heat transport Contribution of mesoscale eddies to heat transportContribution of mesoscale eddies to heat transport

6 Why are mesoscale eddies important? b Biological communities of the ocean Strongly affected by ocean circulation and mesoscale eddiesStrongly affected by ocean circulation and mesoscale eddies Nutrient rich cold water at the bottomNutrient rich cold water at the bottom Cold cyclonic eddies can lift this nutrient waters towards surfaceCold cyclonic eddies can lift this nutrient waters towards surface Sunlight on surface helps nutrient rich water promote chlorophyll rich plankton, and thereby the food chain from plankton to whalesSunlight on surface helps nutrient rich water promote chlorophyll rich plankton, and thereby the food chain from plankton to whales

7 Why an automatic detection of eddies? b A large number of eddies present in the ocean b Computation of contribution of mesoscale eddies to poleward heat transport b Enable motion tracking of eddies to study it’s trajectory b Visualize the different kinds of eddies present all over the ocean

8 MICOM Dataset b Miami Isopycnic Coordinate Ocean Model b Available Parameters b Size of this Dataset b Data Profile

9 Miami Isopycnic Coordinate Ocean Model b Is the dataset used in this project b Is a numeric 3D model of the ocean where vertical coordinate is density b Is where the ocean is divided into 11 layers, each of which maintains its own density -- hence the term isopycnic, meaning constant density

10 Available parameters b MICOM provides Temperature, Velocity, Salinity information of the ocean b Information available in a spatial resolution of 1/12 th degree b Temporal resolution of every 3 days, for a whole year b Entire Atlantic ocean in the northern hemisphere considered

11 Size of this dataset b Snapshots of the ocean, is available for 120 different days at 11 different layers b That’s over a billion points in the ocean for which Temperature, Velocity, Salinity information is available b Today we have massive datasets of information, powerful computers, and advanced computing techniques b Utilizing these fully can unravel insights about the world in a way not possible before

12 Data Profile b Histograms give a graphical overview of data distribution, by plotting the number of occurences of a range of value b With multiple histograms presented here, a quick overview of the distribution for different layers of the oceans at different times can be visualized

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15 Detection of Eddies b Visualizing Eddies b Pattern recognition b Structuring Element for Finding Eddies b Results

16 Visualizing eddies b What you see is what you could possibly detect b Need to see the feature prominently b Need a view where a pattern is perceived before an automatic detection can be done based on this pattern

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23 Structuring element for automatic detection of eddies

24 Results of automatic detection

25 Results DataNumber of eddies examined False Positives AccuracyVisualization Used Day 27 Layer 4400100%Quiver Plots Day 12 Layer 839197.50%Quiver Plots Day 15 Layer 818194.44%Quiver Plots Day 24 Layer 4105918782.44%Cone Plots, Streamline Day 33 Layer 85757786.66%Streamline

26 Segmentation of Eddies b Donut Structuring Element b Statistical Border Detection b Segmented Eddies b Circle vs Ellipse Method b Results

27 Donut Structuring element b Three consecutive circles b More number of sample points than a single circle/ellipse alone b Donut of radius 11 would sample 240 points

28 Statistical Border Detection

29 Segmented Eddies

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32 Results b Number of eddies verified manually: 120 b Number of eddies that were mis-segmented by an area > 15% = 20 b Accuracy of segmentation technique: 83.3%

33 Circle vs Ellipse

34 Visualizations of eddies b Enhanced Pseudocolor plots b Movies of eddies in motion b Multi-Layer Streamline plots b 3D Cone plots

35 Pseudocolor Log velocity plot

36 Multi-layer Streamline Plot

37 3D Cone plot

38 Conclusions and Future Work b Fairly Accurate Pattern Recognition b Able to estimate poleward heat transport of eddies from the results of this project b Build eddy tracking algorithm b Develop pattern recognition algorithm for temperature only databases b Geometrically Deformable Model can be used for more accurate segmentation


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