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An improved solution for deformation simulation of nonorthotropic geometric models
Author(s) -
Cao Wei,
Yang Zhixin,
Ren Xiaohua,
Lyu Luan,
Zhang Bob,
Zhang Yanci,
Wu Enhua
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
computer animation and virtual worlds
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.225
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1546-427X
pISSN - 1546-4261
DOI - 10.1002/cav.1915
Subject(s) - computer science , cartesian coordinate system , orthotropic material , deformation (meteorology) , frame (networking) , coordinate system , reference frame , geometric modeling , local coordinates , field (mathematics) , object (grammar) , point (geometry) , geometry , computer vision , artificial intelligence , mathematics , finite element method , physics , telecommunications , meteorology , pure mathematics , thermodynamics
Physically based deformation simulation has been studied for many years in computer graphics. In order to simulate more complex geometric models and better meet the designer's requirements, many anisotropic approaches have been proposed in recent years. However, most of the approaches focus on simulating orthotropic models. In comparison with orthotropic models, nonorthotropic ones allow the objects to have anisotropic behaviors along nonorthogonal directions. In this paper, we introduce an improved approach to simulate nonorthotropic geometric models under large deformation. The improvements are mainly twofold. First, a frame field is specified on a given undeformed object, that is, each point of the object is equipped with a frame. In each local frame, we construct three independent vectors and form a nonorthogonal coordinate. Second, we design the deformation properties along each axis in the local nonorthogonal coordinate to get a local constitutive model. The final nonorthotropic model is generated by transforming the designed model from local nonorthogonal coordinates to the global standard Cartesian coordinate. To improve the stability, we introduce a time‐varying method to simultaneously track the local coordinates reorientation by pushing forward the original frame field to the deformed frame field. Experiments show that the deformation simulation using the designed nonorthotropic models exhibits anisotropic behaviors along different directions and are more stable than previous methods.