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T. J. Peters, University of Connecticut www.cse.uconn.edu/~tpeters K. Abe, A. C. Russell, J. Bisceglio, E.. Moore, D. R. Ferguson, T. Sakkalis Topological Examples for Algorithmic Verification
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Outline: Topology & Approximation Algorithms Applications
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Unknot
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Bad Approximation Why? Curvature? Separation?
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Why Bad? Homeomorphic! Changes Knot Type Now has 4 Crossings
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Good Approximation Homeomorphic vs. Ambient Isotopic (with compact support) Via Curvature (local) Separation (global)
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Summary – Key Ideas Curves –Don’t be deceived by images (3D !) –Crossings versus self-intersections Local and global arguments Knot equivalence via isotopy
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Initial Assumptions on a 2-manifold, M Without boundary 2 nd derivatives are continuous (curvature)
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T
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Proof: Similar to flow on normal field. Comment: Points need not be on surface. (noise!) Theorem: Any approximation of F in T such that each normal hits one point of W is ambient isotopic to F.
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Tubular Neighborhoods Its radius defined by ½ minimum –all radii of curvature on 2-manifold –global separation distance. Estimates, but more stable than medial axis. and Ambient Isotopy
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Medial Axis H. Blum, biology, classification by skeleton Closure of the set of points that have at least 2 nearest neighbors on M
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X
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Large Data Set ! Partitioned Stanford Bunny
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Acknowledgements, NSF I-TANGO: Intersections --- Topology, Accuracy and Numerics for Geometric Objects (in Computer Aided Design), May 1, 2002, #DMS-0138098.I-TANGO: Intersections --- Topology, Accuracy and Numerics for Geometric Objects (in Computer Aided Design), May 1, 2002, #DMS-0138098. SGER: Computational Topology for Surface Reconstruction, NSF, October 1, 2002, #CCR - 0226504.SGER: Computational Topology for Surface Reconstruction, NSF, October 1, 2002, #CCR - 0226504. Computational Topology for Surface Approximation, September 15, 2004,Computational Topology for Surface Approximation, September 15, 2004, #FMM -0429477.
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