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Visual smoothness of polyhedral surfaces
Author(s) -
Davide Pellis,
Martin Kilian,
Felix Dellinger,
Johannes Wallner,
Helmut Pottmann
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acm transactions on graphics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.153
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1557-7368
pISSN - 0730-0301
DOI - 10.1145/3306346.3322975
Subject(s) - polygon mesh , vertex (graph theory) , curvature , principal curvature , saddle , smoothness , surface (topology) , representation (politics) , computer science , mathematics , pyramid (geometry) , mean curvature , saddle point , face (sociological concept) , geometry , combinatorics , mathematical optimization , graph , mathematical analysis , social science , sociology , politics , political science , law
Representing smooth geometric shapes by polyhedral meshes can be quite difficult in situations where the variation of edges and face normals is prominently visible. Especially problematic are saddle-shaped areas of the mesh, where typical vertices with six incident edges are ill suited to emulate the more symmetric smooth situation. The importance of a faithful discrete representation is apparent for certain special applications like freeform architecture, but is also relevant for simulation and geometric computing.In this paper we discuss what exactly is meant by a good representation of saddle points, and how this requirement is stronger than a good approximation of a surface plus its normals. We characterize good saddles in terms of the normal pyramid in a vertex.We show several ways to design meshes whose normals enjoy small variation (implying good saddle points). For this purpose we define a discrete energy of polyhedral surfaces, which is related to a certain total absolute curvature of smooth surfaces. We discuss the minimizers of both functionals and in particular show that the discrete energy is minimal not for triangle meshes, but for principal quad meshes. We demonstrate our procedures for optimization and interactive design by means of meshes intended for architectural design.

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