Classroom Handout:
Pick up your handout on PV-Wave procedures and HDF-C/FORTRAN program example on
how to make the different types of HDF files.
Such CT scanners exists at several government research facilities. At NASA Langley such scanners are mounted on a mechanical load frame where materials are subject to tension loads and the resulting crack and void coalition can be observed as a "3D distributed damage state" that grows ("evolves") into a critical damage state of fracture. For example with such a system the growth of a damage state can be tracked at twenty different increasing load levels.
Using the pixel resolution state above how much data, in Mbytes, would result from a test with twenty load scans? How much more storage would be required if we doubled the pixel resolution to detect smaller cracks? If the researcher asked for more scans at smaller increments of load, how much would this increase the storage requirements? How would you organize and store these data sets without losing critical physical information for quantitative material characterization (i.e. number of significant figures: integers .vs. floating point)? Are there hardware-software limits for volume visualization of such large data sets? Include these comments in your lastname.txt file.
Put a copy of any C, FORTRAN, and PV-Wave procedure files you used in this assignment, in your lastname directory. Also put a copy of a text file lastname.txt with your comments on homework assignment#3.
Put a copy of your "pics" and QuickTime animation files on the shared optical disk (Mac formatted) located near Mac_Development. Print a copy of your files and also hand these copies in at class on the due date.
Your grade will be based on your observations and conclusions and on what I see in your image files. Your grade will not be based on your programming skills although brevity, clarity, and meaningful comment statements will be appreciated.
http://www.sv.vt.edu/classes/ESM4714/Assign/assign3.html