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Advanced Visualization Lab

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The Advanced Visualization Lab (AVL) is a team at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign[1]. The AVL specializes in creating cinematic scientific visualizations of large, three-dimensional, time-evolving data. The AVL has contributed to a number of scientific documentaries including the IMAX film "A Beautiful Planet", "Seeing the Beginning of Time" (available on Amazon Prime Video ), and the fulldome films "Solar Superstorms" and "Birth of Planet Earth".

History

The AVL was established in 2006 by Art + Design Professor Donna Cox. Cox coined the term "Renaissance Team"[2] to describe the combination of artists, technologists, and scientists that it takes to create cinematic scientific visualizations.

As of 2020, the core AVL team members are Donna Cox (director), Robert Patterson (designer), Stuart Levy (senior programmer), Kalina Borkiewicz (senior programmer), AJ Christensen (designer), and Jeff Carpenter[3]. Past team members include Gretchen Hall and Alex Betts.

Work

In 2015-2019, the AVL created a number of visualizations as part of the National Science Foundation funded grant, CADENS[4]. This grant resulted in three fulldome documentaries - "Solar Superstorms" (2015), "Birth of Planet Earth" (2019), and "Atlas of a Changing Earth" (2021) - as well as a number of flat-screen documentaries and making-of documentaries for international television and streaming[5].

References

  1. ^ http://avl.ncsa.illinois.edu/
  2. ^ 1988. "Renaissance Teams and Scientific Visualization: A Convergence of Art and Science". In: Collaboration in Computer Graphics Education, SIGGRAPH 88 Educator's Workshop Proceedings, D. Cox, August 1–5, 1988, p. 81 - 104;
  3. ^ http://avl.ncsa.illinois.edu/about
  4. ^ https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1445176
  5. ^ http://cadens.ncsa.illinois.edu/