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TZID:Europe/Stockholm
X-LIC-LOCATION:Europe/Stockholm
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:19700308T020000
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DTSTART:19701101T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250822T115806Z
LOCATION:Room 5.0B15 & 16
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20250618T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20250618T093000
UID:submissions.pasc-conference.org_PASC25_sess112_msa209@linklings.com
SUMMARY:Multi-Tool Workflows for Scientific Art – Visualising Pollutant Di
 spersion in a Domestic Kitchen
DESCRIPTION:Mathew Chambers, Harriet Jones, and Charles Moulinec (Science 
 and Technology Facilities Council)\n\nEffectively communicating the result
 s and impact of any piece of scientific research presents a significant ch
 allenge. Multiple audiences are usually targeted, including experts, the w
 ider scientific community, and the general public. Visual and audio-visual
  artistic outputs are a powerful way to convey key messages. They can also
  be used to further inform the research they represent. Such pieces of sci
 entific art can capture the public imagination, or even be used to stimula
 te discussion of new areas of investigation. The example of two audience-s
 pecific visualisation approaches, both using the same data from Computatio
 nal Fluid Dynamics simulations of the dispersion of pollutants generated f
 rom cooking in a domestic kitchen, is used to illustrate this. Resources p
 roduced to communicate the results to the scientific community, focusing o
 n the alignment of results to experimental data, are compared and contrast
 ed with resources produced to communicate the message of the study to the 
 general public. The development of suitable workflows connecting initial C
 AD and simulation data with tools such as ParaView, Blender and Houdini is
  discussed, and the importance of collaboration between research scientist
 s and digital artists, blending the perspectives of both to produce the mo
 st impactful final outputs, is demonstrated.\n\nDomain: Climate, Weather, 
 and Earth Sciences, Engineering, Life Sciences, Physics, Computational Met
 hods and Applied Mathematics\n\nSession Chairs: Guillaume Houzeaux (Barcel
 ona Supercomputing Center) and Charles Moulinec (Science and Technology Fa
 cilities Council)\n\n
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