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Preventing self-intersection under free-form deformation
61
Citations
33
References
2001
Year
EngineeringGeometryGeometry GenerationSubdivision SurfaceComputer-aided DesignComputational MechanicsFree-form DeformationInjectivity TestPossible DeformationsGlobal AnalysisComputational GeometryGeometry ProcessingGeometric ModelingComputer EngineeringComputer ScienceDeformation ReconstructionNatural SciencesDiscrete Differential GeometryShape ModelingSolid Modeling
Free-Form Deformation (FFD) is a versatile and efficient modeling technique which transforms an object by warping the surrounding space. The conventional user-interface is a lattice of movable control points but this tends to be cumbersome and counterintuitive. Directly Manipulated Free-Form Deformation (DMFFD) allows the user to drag object points directly and has proven useful in an interactive sculpting context. A serious shortcoming of both FFD and DMFFD is that some deformations cause self-intersection of the object. This is unrealistic and compromises the object's validity and suitability for later use. An in-built self-intersection test is thus required for FFD and its extensions to be truly robust In this paper, we present the following novel results set of theoretical conditions for preventing self-intersection by ensuring the injectivity (one-to-one mapping) of FFD, an exact. (necessary and sufficient) injectivity test which is accurate but computationally costly, an efficient but approximate injectivity test which is a sufficient condition only, and a new form of DMFFD which acts by composing many small injective deformations. The latter expands the range of possible deformations without sacrificing the speed of the approximate test.
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