View allAll Photos Tagged Visualize
Mike Moradi, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Sensulin, USA; Young Global Leader capture during the Session: "Visualizing Disease" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary
Ascent Penthouse
Client: Mr Dung - IAM Architecture
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@ Long Nguyen & Thu Nguyen
Architecture - Interior Design & 3D Visualization
0979 962 864, Ho Chi Minh City
advlongnguyen@gmail.com
If the US had a FICO score, what would it be?
Client work: www.creditloan.com/blog/uncle-sams-credit-score/
1534 vehicles, during October 2009, with its routes condensed and mapped in the same image. Each color corresponds to one vehicle.
A fun chart comparing the use of three terms for scary stuff, over time: terror, horror, Gothic.
Man, this is automatically teachable. And provocative.
Built using Google's NGram.
This image visualizes the discovery of asteroids from 1801 to 1950. The Solar System is shown in a logarithmic scale to allow both the main asteroid belt and Kuiper objects to be shown. Asteroids are shown in the position of their perihelion. This makes it easier to separate the various families.
I also plotted the histogram of how many minor planets were discovered each year, the semi-major axis, and excentricity on the right panels. The left panels show the excentricity and inclination as a function of semi-major axis, this is again to show how the various asteroid families were defined based on their orbits.
Data source: www.minorplanetcenter.net/
Youtube visualization: youtu.be/QOdrRX-IScc
A tour of the newly renovated EVEREST visualization theater at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility.
A paper published in Nature’s Scientific Reports by a team led by Argonne physicist Igor Aronson modeled the motion of cells moving together. This may help scientists design new technologies inspired by nature, such as self-healing materials in batteries and other devices. Read more »
Above: In a simulated collision, two cells deform as they bounce off each other. Many small such collisions can lead to a group of cells moving together in tandem, as modeled by researchers at Argonne National Laboratory. Image credit: Igor Aronson.
David Cook, Chief Clinical and Operating Officer, Jiahui Health, People’s Republic of China capture during the Session: "Visualizing Disease" at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary
Ascent Penthouse
Client: Mr Dung - IAM Architecture
---
@ Long Nguyen & Thu Nguyen
Architecture - Interior Design & 3D Visualization
0979 962 864, Ho Chi Minh City
advlongnguyen@gmail.com
Tag clouds with shaft of light over the Canadian topography, or playing tag with the Fraser Institute.
This tag cloud was merged with a Google Earth view from West Coast mountains towards Ottawa and Washington in the East. The beam of light in the background is the Enron tower.
In the Adobe Photoshop toolbar under Filter > Liquify > I maximized the brush to create powerful wind patterns effects in the clouds hovering over the Canadian topology.
I studied the Fraser Institute's on-line annual reports and web pages to piece together the following categories, tags or folksonomies to introduce mass media users to one of the most highly cited think tanks which emerged in 1974 at the height of Thatcherism. These are the tags in the cloud:
Economic Freedom, Milton Freeman, Education, Environment and Risk, Privatizing Correctional Services (1998), Alan Greenspan, Skeptical Environmentalist by Bjørn Lomborg, Fiscal Policy, Sally Pipes, T. Patrick Boyle, MacMillan Bloedel, Governance, Csaba Hajd, Ralph Klein, Private vs. Public Health, Can the Market Save Our Schools? (2000), Law and Markets, Caring For Profit: Economic Dimensions of Canada’s Health Care Industry (1987), Non-profit Studies, Adam Smith, Atlas Foundation, Sir Antony Fisher, Regulatory, Pharmaceutical Policy, The Illusion of Wage and Price Controls, Preston Manning, Entrepreneurship and Markets, Michael Walker, IEA, Alan Campney, Social Affairs, School Report Cards, Thatcher, economic conscience, Bill Emmott, George Shultz, John Raybould, Trade and Globalization, Schumpeter, The Economist, Cato Institute- Washington, Rent Control: A Popular Paradox
See also Think Tanks: Corporate Director Board Interlocks: Fraser Institute
I participated in www.familytreedna.com, did a DNA test, and now am linked to other Gallaghers (and related surnames) who also had little to no idea as to their heritage.
Posthuman learning, inward and outward explorations of composition and relationships.
Visualize graphic available for download at http://dryicons.com/free-graphics/preview/visualize/ in EPS (vector) format.
View similar vector graphics at DryIcons Graphics.
Edited Chandra Space Telescope visualization of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy (our galaxy), with lots of stars and gas and energetic processes. Processing variant.
Image source: chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2018/gcenter360/
Original caption: A new visualization provides an exceptional virtual trip — complete with a 360-degree view — to the center of our home galaxy, the Milky Way. This project, made using data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes, allows viewers to control their own exploration of the fascinating environment of volatile massive stars and powerful gravity around the monster black hole that lies in the center of the Milky Way.
The Earth is located about 26,000 light years, or about 150,000 trillion miles, from the center of the Galaxy. While humans cannot physically travel there, scientists have been able to study this region by using data from powerful telescopes that can detect light in a variety of forms, including X-ray and infrared light.
This visualization builds on infrared data with the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope of 30 massive stellar giants called Wolf-Rayet stars that orbit within about 1.5 light years of the center of our Galaxy. Powerful winds of gas streaming from the surface of these stars are carrying some of their outer layers into interstellar space.
When the outflowing gas collides with previously ejected gas from other stars, the collisions produce shock waves, similar to sonic booms, which permeate the area. These shock waves heat the gas to millions of degrees, which causes it to glow in X-rays. Extensive observations with Chandra of the central regions of the Milky Way have provided critical data about the temperature and distribution of this multimillion-degree gas.
Astronomers are interested in better understanding what role these Wolf-Rayet stars play in the cosmic neighborhood at the Milky Way's center. In particular, they would like to know how the stars interact with the Galactic center's most dominant resident: the supermassive black hole known as Sagittarius A* (abbreviated Sgr A*). Pre-eminent yet invisible, Sgr A* has the mass equivalent to some four million Suns.
The Galactic Center visualization is a 360-degree movie that immerses the viewer into a simulation of the center of our Galaxy. The viewer is at the location of Sgr A* and is able to see about 25 Wolf-Rayet stars (white, twinkling objects) orbiting Sgr A* as they continuously eject stellar winds (black to red to yellow color scale). These winds collide with each other, and then some of this material (yellow blobs) spirals towards Sgr A*. The movie shows two simulations, each of which start around 350 years in the past and span 500 years. The first simulation shows Sgr A* in a calm state, while the second contains a more violent Sgr A* that is expelling its own material, thereby turning off the accretion of clumped material (yellow blobs) that is so prominent in the first portion.
Scientists have used the visualization to examine the effects Sgr A* has on its stellar neighbors. As the strong gravity of Sgr A* pulls clumps of material inwards, tidal forces stretch the clumps as they get closer to the black hole. Sgr A* also impacts its surroundings through occasional outbursts from its vicinity that result in the expulsion of material away from the giant black hole, as shown in the later part of the movie. These outbursts can have the effect of clearing away some of the gas produced by the Wolf-Rayet winds.
The researchers, led by Christopher Russell of the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, used the visualization to understand the presence of previously detected X-rays in the shape of a disk that extend about 0.6 light years outward from Sgr A*. Their work shows that the amount of X-rays generated by these colliding winds depends on the strength of outbursts powered by Sgr A*, and also the amount of time that has elapsed since an eruption occurred. Stronger and more recent outbursts result in weaker X-ray emission.
The information provided by the theoretical modeling and a comparison with the strength of X-ray emission observed with Chandra led Russell and his colleagues to determine that Sgr A* most likely had a relatively powerful outburst that started within the last few centuries. Moreover, their findings suggest the outburst from the supermassive black hole is still affecting the region around Sgr A* even though it ended about one hundred years ago.
The 360-degree video of the Galactic Center is ideally viewed in virtual reality (VR) goggles, such as Samsung Gear VR or Google Cardboard. The video can also be viewed on smartphones using the YouTube app. Moving the phone around pans to show a different portion of the movie, mimicking the effect in the VR goggles. Finally, most browsers on a computer also allow 360-degree videos to be shown on YouTube. To look around, either click and drag the video, or click the direction pad in the corner.
Christopher Russell presented this new visualization and the related scientific findings at the 231st meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Washington, DC. Some of the results are based on a paper by Russell et al published in 2017 in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. An online version is here. The co-authors of this paper are Daniel Wang from University of Massachusetts in Amherst, Mass. and Jorge Cuadra from Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, controls Chandra's science and flight operations.
Ascent Penthouse
Client: Mr Dung - IAM Architecture
---
@ Long Nguyen & Thu Nguyen
Architecture - Interior Design & 3D Visualization
0979 962 864, Ho Chi Minh City
advlongnguyen@gmail.com
Fresh House | Visualization Project
Project : L.A Apartment
Co-op with the company in Norway
Visualized by Fresh House
Fresh House | Visualization Project
Project : L.A Apartment
Co-op with the company in Norway
Visualized by Fresh House
Ascent Penthouse
Client: Mr Dung - IAM Architecture
---
@ Long Nguyen & Thu Nguyen
Architecture - Interior Design & 3D Visualization
0979 962 864, Ho Chi Minh City
advlongnguyen@gmail.com
Stunning visualization of death over space and time. Turn up the volume too.
Fresh House | Visualization Project
Project : L.A Apartment
Co-op with the company in Norway
Visualized by Fresh House
✰ This photo was featured on The Epic Global Showcase here: bit.ly/1RDlf6w
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Beautiful and cute by @murka.art tag your art #arts_visualization for a possible feature. #instaartist #art #artist_4_shoutout #blvart #art_spotlight #art_collective #art_empire #artextreme #imaginationarts #artistic_support #artistic_nation #worldofartists #phanasu #mizu_art#worldofpencils #drawing_feature#drawings #drawing#mixedmedia #artsanity#pencildrawing#artoftheday#cute#beautiful #amazing by @arts_visualization bit.ly/1SabdFW
Germans, Goose, Gypsy Guitar, Gymnastic Girl - 1. Die Deutschen, 2. Paparazzi........... To get out .... being away, 3. greg ruby with favino, 4. bee happy :) - sent to my group www.flickr.com/groups/abc-visualized
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The same query as in the previous image, only 42 hours after launch...
More info here: postspectacular.com/work/socialcollider/start
Part of the official Google Chrome collection of original experiments demonstrating the superior JavaScript performance of Google's browser, the Social Collider reveals cross-connections between conversations on Twitter.
With the Internet's promise of instant and absolute connectedness, two things appear to be curiously underrepresented: both temporal and lateral perspective of our data-trails. Yet, the amount of data we are constantly producing provides a whole world of contexts, many of which can reveal astonishing relationships if only looked at through time.
This experiment explores these possibilities by starting with messages on the microblogging-platform Twitter. One can search for usernames or topics, which are tracked through time and visualized much like the way a particle collider draws pictures of subatomic matter. Posts that didn't resonate with anyone just connect to the next item in the stream. The ones that did, however, spin off and horizontally link to users or topics who relate to them, either directly or in terms of their content.
The Social Collider acts as a metaphorical instrument which can be used to make visible how memes get created and how they propagate. Ideally, it might catch the Zeitgeist at work.
Credits
Karsten Schmidt - concept, design & programming
Sascha Pohflepp - concept, design
Follow us on Twitter for updates:
Image taken from Christensen, V., S. Guénette, J. J. Heymans, C.J. Walters, R. Watson, D. Zeller and D. Pauly. 2003. Hundred year decline of North Atlantic predatory fishes. Fish and Fisheries 4(1): 1-24. [link]
See the snazzier visualization by David McCandless (Information is Beautiful) at The Guardian's article
Ascent Penthouse
Client: Mr Dung - IAM Architecture
---
@ Long Nguyen & Thu Nguyen
Architecture - Interior Design & 3D Visualization
0979 962 864, Ho Chi Minh City
advlongnguyen@gmail.com
Visualization Exercise:
It's a prayer for peace,
may those who lied their way into taking a nation to war be held accountable to the fullest extent.
The most loving action we could take for people like Richard Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, the architects of war, would be to arrest them, and investigate their actions regarding war, so that they may have opportunity to repay their tremendous debt to society and humanity, and thereby be able restore their position amongst the human family.
We really need an investigation into the alleged crimes of war of Cheney, Rumsfeld, et al.. And so do they. We owe it to them, and to everyone - to all of humanity.
Architecture 3D Visualization
Client & Architect:
Chronos, Maas und Partner
Location: Münster, Hafen
Visualization: Renderfriends UG
Annual beer consumption, 8 different ways.
Client work:
www.sloshspot.com/blog/10-09-2008/The-Year-in-Beer-Beer-D...