Characterizing water quality monitoring visualization with Hadoop and Google Maps
Author(s) -
Weijian Huang,
Xinfei Zhao,
Yuanbin Han,
Wei Du,
Yao Cheng
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
water practice and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.243
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 1751-231X
DOI - 10.2166/wpt.2017.093
Subject(s) - visualization , computer science , data mining , process (computing) , quality (philosophy) , database , software , data visualization , water quality , abstraction , task (project management) , data quality , engineering , systems engineering , ecology , metric (unit) , philosophy , operations management , epistemology , biology , operating system , programming language
In water quality monitoring, the complexity and abstraction of water environment data make it difficult for staff to monitor the data efficiently and intuitively. Visualization of water quality data is an important part of the monitoring and analysis of water quality. Because water quality data have geographic features, their visualization can be realized using maps, which not only provide intuitive visualization, but also reflect the relationship between water quality and geographical position. For this study, the heat map provided by Google Maps was used for water quality data visualization. However, as the amount of data increases, the computational efficiency of traditional development models cannot meet the computing task needs quickly. Effective storage, extraction and analysis of large water data sets becomes a problem that needs urgent solution. Hadoop is an open source software framework running on computer clusters that can store and process large data sets efficiently, and it was used in this study to store and process water quality data. Through reasonable analysis and experiment, an efficient and convenient information platform can be provided for water quality monitoring.
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