Smoothing of curves and surfaces (Q1064727): Difference between revisions

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Property / cites work: Caustics through the looking glass / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Implicitization, inversion, and intersection of planar rational cubic curves / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Detecting regions with undesirable curvature / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Smoothing of curves and surfaces / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 18:14, 14 June 2024

scientific article
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English
Smoothing of curves and surfaces
scientific article

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    Smoothing of curves and surfaces (English)
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    1985
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    This paper is concerned with the representation of surfaces with a desired shape. When using Bézier or B-splines techniques for interpolation or approximation of curves or surfaces, undesired inflexion points or changes of sign in the Gaussian curvatures may occur. A procedure is described that permits to detect such points by inspecting the associated orthotomic curve or surface. If we consider a point P, not in the surface X, as a light source, the orthotomic surface can be thought as the wave front reflected by X. It turns out that changes in sign in the Gaussian curvatures of X correspond to cusps in the orthotomic surface (caustics), that can be made much more apparent than the changes of curvature in the original surface, as is shown graphically in various examples. It is also indicated how to smooth interactively such undesirable features on Bézier curves by collapsing two of these changes of curvature into a flat point; this is done by finding the zeroes of an appropriate Bézout determinant. This smoothing procedure does not look too practical for surfaces, since fairly high degree polynomials arise in the computation.
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    inflection points
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    Bézout-method
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    Bézier
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    B-splines
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    Gaussian curvatures
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    orthotomic surface
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