المدة الزمنية 43:59

Supercells In Polygondwanaland

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تم نشره في 2023/08/17

Over the past decades I've accumulated a lot of video from my research that has never seen the light of day. I've always wanted to do a long segment highlighting different aspects of supercells in a more artful form than my typical scientific presentations, but I knew it needed a decent soundtrack, and I don't have time to create my own music right now. A year or so ago I discovered this nifty band with the funny name. Their twelfth album, Polygondwanaland, was given away by the band for free - as in free to make your own copies, etc.! A couple months ago I started thinking about whether it was legal for me to do exactly what you see here, and once I realized, well, yeah it is, well, the die was cast. However I just couldn't get myself to start the project. Yesterday... I woke up with an itchy brain... and I finally sat down and started pasting a few video segments into Final Cut Pro. I only had two segments in mind when I started this project... 99% of this is pure serendipity and wherever I was scrolling through my hundreds of old video files. The entire project was completed in about six hours time. Like the music, the video is yours to use for whatever purpose you want - no encumbrances. If you see some weirdness in the swarms of particles and vorticity, it's because of compression artifacts from streaming. I have created a 1080p 60fps MP4 file you can download that does not have any streaming artifacts: https://orf.media/supercells-in-polygondwanaland @KingGizzardAndTheLizardWizard are: Stu Mackenzie, Ambrose Kenny-Smith, Cook Craig, Joey Walker, Lucas Harwood and Michael Cavanagh. ABOUT WHAT YOU ARE SEEING HERE: All of the animations are visual representations of simulated supercell thunderstorms. Simulations were run with the NCOMMAS (old stuff) and CM1 model on supercomputers, and visualizations were made, frame by frame, by visualization software. Many of the visualizations here contain very interesting science, with a few that were just mistakes that look cool. As I worked throughout the day I started playing more with filters so some of the video is highly distorted from its original form, and some of it is very clean. Definitely in the spirit of the band's own production haha.... Credits: The National Science Foundation, funded by the taxpayers of the United States, funded much of this work, including the Blue Waters supercomputer that created many of these simulations. Some simulations were run on hardware at Central Michigan University in the mid-2000's. Leigh Orf's collaborators on the initial supercell work include Robert Wilhelmson, Cathy Finley and Bruce Lee. All software used to create individual frames is open source software including: Vis5d, VAPOR, Paraview, ncview, and VisIt. Websites: https://www.ssec.wisc.edu/~ billh/vis5d.html https://www.vapor.ucar.edu/ https://www.paraview.org/ https://cirrus.ucsd.edu/ncview/ https://wci.llnl.gov/simulation/computer-codes/visit The CM1 model is also open source: https://www2.mmm.ucar.edu/people/bryan/cm1/ This video was constructed using Final Cut Pro.

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تعليقات - 23
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    @RobertBardwell9 months ago Never expected a Leigh Orf and King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard collab, but I'm here for it! A profound musical backdrop for contemplating the destructive beauty of these mesmerizing supercells. 16
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    @Turdfergusen3822 weeks ago This is great would love to see something like this that details cell mergers into tornadoes producing cells of various sizes.
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    @francistarasiewcz7759one week ago You should use their song "Supercell" for your next project :) 1
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    @mattmichael67929 months ago This is fantastic, and if the band has any sense at all, they will make this their official music video. What a freaking honor to be represented by the absolute bleeding edge of scientific exploration. 3
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    @Graveyardskank2 weeks ago Love seeing the details in these models. Good music choice btw, seen them live afew years back :D
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    @mattmichael67929 months ago Leigh, this is a work of scientific AND artistic genius. Thoroughly absorbing and intensely pleasurable to experience. 2
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    @bigbizz35039 months ago Well done Doc. Your work never ceases to amaze me. 2
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    @Muccie29 months ago Just what I needed to look at while listening to CEU’s today! Thanks! 2
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    @facingthewind9 months ago I can’t decide which is more genius, the modeling seen in the video or your decision to pair this particular album with it. Absolutely brilliant. 1
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    @LeighOrfsThunderstormResearch9 months ago EF5, force of nature
    Demolition, meet your maker
    Throwing cities like leaves />Our mortal surface is wiped clean
    ... 3
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    @a.randomjack66619 months ago It's not turtles all the way down, it's fractals.
    This is my 3rd or 4th view. I'll be back 🌪
    1
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    @tornadoclips20229 months ago Amazing I hope to do this someday although I have already done it in my living room!! 1
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    @DalesBadBug2 weeks ago you're amazing. This stuff still blows my mind. in chapter 14 of the video...does this represent a Hook echo ?
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    @postsurrealfish9 months ago Moving electrical charge and in great detail, fantastic and brilliant. And especially when the Birkeland Current is in PDM 3, arc mode- "...An electric vacuum cleaner spins by way of an electric motor and it is its high spin rate that creates low air pressure and so making the cleaner suck and likewise, it’s not the Low pressure creating the movement through the atmosphere. But instead, its the spinning charge through the atmosphere that is creating the low pressure..."- Electric Weather Mechanics ...