Dual/primal mesh optimization for polygonized implicit surfaces

Yutaka Ohtake*, Alexander G. Belyaev

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

55 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A new method for improving polygonizations of implicit surfaces with sharp features is proposed. The method is based on the observation that, given an implicit surface with sharp features, a triangle mesh whose triangles are tangent to the implicit surface at certain inner triangle points gives a better approximation of the implicit surface than the standard marching cubes mesh [11] (in our experiments we use VTK marching cubes [16]). First, given an initial triangle mesh, its dual mesh composed of the triangle centroids is considered. Then the dual mesh is modified such that its vertices are placed on the implicit surface and the mesh dual to the modified dual mesh is considered. Finally the vertex positions of that "double dual" mesh are optimized by minimizing a quadratic energy measuring a deviation of the mesh normals from the implicit surface normals computed at the vertices of the modified dual mesh. In order to achieve an accurate approximation of fine surface features, these basic steps are combined with adaptive mesh subdivision and curvature-weighted vertex resampling. The proposed method outperforms approaches based on the mesh evolution paradigm in speed and accuracy.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationSMA '02: Proceedings of the seventh ACM symposium on Solid modeling and applications
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Pages171-178
Number of pages8
ISBN (Print)1581135068
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Jun 2002
Event7th ACM Symposium on Solid Modeling and Applications 2002 - Saarbrucken, Germany
Duration: 17 Jun 200221 Jun 2002

Conference

Conference7th ACM Symposium on Solid Modeling and Applications 2002
Abbreviated titleSM'02
Country/TerritoryGermany
CitySaarbrucken
Period17/06/0221/06/02

Keywords

  • Adaptive subdivision
  • Dual meshes
  • Mesh optimization
  • Polygonized implicit surfaces

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Engineering

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