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Smooth Spline Surfaces over Irregular Topology Hui-xia Xu Wednesday, Apr. 4, 2007
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Background limitation an inability of coping with surfaces of irregular topology, i.e., requiring the control meshes to form a regular quadrilateral structure
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Improved Methods To overcome this limitation, a number of methods have been proposed. Roughly speaking, these methods are categorized into two groups: Subdivision surfaces Spline surfaces
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Subdivision Surfaces
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Subdivision Surfaces ---main idea polygon mesh iteratively applying resultant mesh converging to smooth surface refinement procedure
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Subdivision Surfaces ---magnum opus Catmull-Clark surfaces E Catmull and J Clark. Recursively generated B-spline surfaces on arbitrary topological meshes, Computer Aided Design 10(1978) 350-355. Doo-Sabin surfaces D Doo and M Sabin. Behaviour of recursive division surfaces near extraordinary points, Computer Aided Design 10 (1978) 356-360.
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About Subdivision Surfaces advantage simplicity and intuitive corner cutting interpretation shortage The subdivision surfaces do not admit a closed analytical expression
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Spline Surfaces
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Method 1 the technology of manifolds C Grimm and J Huges. Modeling surfaces of arbitrary topology using manifolds, Proceedings of SIGGRAPH (1995) 359-368 J Cotrina Navau and N Pla Garcia. Modeling surfaces from meshes of arbitrary topology, Computer Aided Geometric Design 17(2000) 643-671
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Method 2 isolate irregular points C Loop and T DeRose. Generalised B-spline surfaces of arbitrary topology, Proceedings of SIGGRAPH (1990) 347-356 J Peters. Biquartic C1-surface splines over irregular meshes, Computer- Aided Design 12(1995) 895-903 J J Zheng et al. Smooth spline surface generation over meshes of irregular topology, Visual Computer(2005) 858-864 J J Zheng et al. C2 continuous spline surfaces over Catmull-Clark meshes, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3482(2005) 1003-1012 J J Zheng and J J Zhang. Interactive deformation of irregular surface models, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2330(2002) 239-248 etc.
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Smooth Spline Surface Generation over Meshes of Irregular Topology J J Zheng, J J Zhang, H J Zhou and L G Shen Visual Computer 21(2005), 858-864
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What to Do In this paper, an efficient method generates a generalized bi-quadratic B-spline surface and achieves C1 smoothness.
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Zheng-Ball Patch A Zheng-Ball patch is a generation of a Sabin patch that is valid for 3- or 5-sided areas. For more details, the following can be referred: J J Zheng and A A Ball. Control point surface over non-four sided areas, Computer Aided Geometric Design 14(1997)807-820. M A Sabin. Non-rectangular surfaces suitable for inclusion in a B- spline surface, Hagen, T. (ed.) Eurographics (1983) 57-69.
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Zheng-Ball Patch An n-sided Zheng-Ball patch of degree m is defined by the following : This patch model is able to smoothly blend the surrounding regular patches
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Zheng-Ball Patch : the n-ple subscripts, :n parameters of which only two are independent : denotes the control points in,as shown in Fig 1. : the associated basis functions
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Fig 1. Control points for a six-sided quadratic Zheng-Ball patch
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Spline Surface Generation --- irregular closed mesh Generate a new refined mesh carry out a single Catmull-Clark subdivision over the user-defined irregular mesh Construct a C1 smooth spline surface regular vertex---a bi-quadratic Bézier patch Otherwise---a quadratic Zheng-Ball patch
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Related Terms Valence The valence of a point is the number of its incident edges. Regular vertex If its valence is 4, the vertex is said to be regular. Regular face A face is said to be regular if none of its vertices are irregular vertices.
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Catmull-Clark Surfaces ---subdivision rules Generation of geometric points Construction of topology
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Geometric Points new face points averaging of the surrounding vertices of the corresponding surface new edge points averaging of the two vertices on the corresponding edge and the new face points on the two faces adjacent to the edge new vertex points averaging of the corresponding vertices and surrounding vertices
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Topology connect each new face point to the new edge points surrounding it Connect each new vertex point to the new edge points surrounding it
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Mesh Subdivision Fig 2. Applying Catmull-Clark subdivision once to vertex V with valence n
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Mesh Subdivision new faces: four-sided The valence of a new edge point is 4 The valence of the new vertex point v remains n The valence of a new face point is the number of edges of the corresponding face of the initial mesh
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Patch Generation For a regular vertex, a bi-quadratic Bézier patch is used For an extraordinary vertex, an n-sided quadratic Zheng-Ball patch will be generated
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Overall C 1 Continuity Fig 3. Two adjacent patches joined with C1 continuity
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Geometric Model Fig 4. Closed irregular mesh and the resulting geometric model
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Spline Surface Generation --- irregular open mesh Step 1: subdividing the mesh to make all faces four-sided Step 2: constructing a surface patch corresponding to each vertex The main task is to deal with the mesh boundaries
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Subdivision Rules for Mesh Boundaries
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Boundary mesh subdivision for 2- and 3-valent vertices face point: Centroid of the i-th face incident to V edge point: averaging of the two endpoints in the associated edge vertex point: equivalent to n-valent vertex V of the initial mesh
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Illustration Fig 5. Subdivision around a boundary vertex v (n=3)
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Boundary mesh subdivision for valence>3 For each vertex V of valence>3, n new vertices W i (i=1,2, …,n) are created by
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Convex Boundary Vertex Fig 6. Left: Convex boundary vertex V 0 of valence 4. Right: New boundary vertices V 0, W 1 and W 4 of valence 2 or 3
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Concave Boundary Vertex Fig 7. Left: Concave inner boundary vertex V of valence 4. Right: New boundary vertices W 1 and W 4 of valence 3
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Boundary Patches
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Some Definitions Boundary vertex: vertex on the boundary of the new mesh Boundary face: at lease one of its vertices is a boundary vertex Intermediate vertex: not a boundary vertex, but at least one of its surrounding faces is a boundary face Inner vertex: none of the faces surrounding is a boundary face
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Generation Rules --- intermediate vertex d is a central control point d 2i is a corner point if its valence is 2 d 2i-1 is a mid-edge control point if its valence is 3 ½*(d i + d i+1 ) is a corner control point if the valences of d i and d i+1 are 3. ½*(d 2i-1 + d) and ½*(d 2i+1 + d) are the two mid-edge control points if f i is not a boundary face. The centroid of face f i is a corner point if f i is not a boundary face.
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Generation Rules --- intermediate vertex Fig 8. Intermediate vertex d (valence 5). Control points ( ○ ) for the patch corresponding to it
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Geometric Model Fig 9. Two models generated from open meshes by proposed method
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Conclusions Fig 10. Sphere produced with Loop’s method (left ) and with the proposed method (right )
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Interactive Deformation of Irregular Surface Models J J Zheng and J J Zhang LNCS 2330(2002), 239-248
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Background Interactive deformation of surface models is an important research topic in surface modeling. However, the presence of irregular surface patches has posed a difficulty in surface deformation.
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Background Interactive deformation involves possibly the following user-controlled deformation operations moving control points of a patch specifying geometric constraints for a patch deforming a patch by exerting virtual forces By far the most difficult task is to all these operations without violating their connection smoothness
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Outline of the Proposed Research This paper will concentrate on two issues modeling of irregular surface patches Zheng-Ball model the connection between different patches formulate an explicit formula to degree elevation and to insert a necessary number of extra control points
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Zheng-Ball Patch This patch model can have any number of sides and is able to smoothly blend the surrounding regular patches This surface model is control-point based and to a large extent similar to Bézier surfaces
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Zheng-Ball Patch Fig 11. 3-sided cubic Zheng-Ball Patch with its control points
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(m=3) Explicit Formula of Degree Elevation explicit formula
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Explicit Formula of Degree Elevation The functions are defined by
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After Degree Elevation Fig 12. Quartic patches with control points after degree elevation. The circles represent the control points contributing to the C0 condition, the black dots represent the control points contributing G1 condition, and the square in the middle represents the free central control point
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Central Control Point The central control point has provided an extra degree of freedom. Moving this control point will deform the shape of the blending patch intuitively, without violating the continuity conditions
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Energy function For an arbitrary patch, an energy function is defined by : where V i, K i and F i are the control point vector, stiffness matrix and force vector, respectively.
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Global Energy Function The new global energy functional is given by where
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Deformation Function The continuity constraints are defined by the following linear matrix equation: Minimising the global energy function subject to the continuity constraints leads to the production of a deformed model consisting of both regular and irregular patches !
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Remarks Typical G1 continuity constraints for the two patches and can be expressed by the following:
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Remarks Fig 13. Two cubic patches share a common boundary
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Illustration Fig 14. Model with 3- and 5-sided patches (green patches). (Middle and Right) Deformed models. There are eight triangular patches on the outer corners of the model, and eight pentagonal patches on the inner corners of the model.
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Algorithm for Interactive Deforming If physical forces are applied to the surface, the following linear system is generated by minimising the quadratic form Subjuect to linear constraints
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Algorithm for Interactive Deforming Fig 16. Algorithm if interactive deformation
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Algorithm for Interactive Deforming l>k. There are free variable left in linear constraints. So linear system can be solved. l<=k. There is no free variable left in linear constraints. So linear system is not solvable. In the latter case, extra degrees of freedom are needed to solve linear system.
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Smooth Models Fig 17. A smooth model with 3- and 5-sided cubic surface patches (left). Deformed model after twice degree elevation (right). Arrows indicate the forces applied on the surface points.
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Conclusions Proposed a surface deformation technique no assumption is made for the degrees of freedom all surface patches can be deformed in the unified form during deformation process, the smoothness conditions between patches will be maintained Derived an explicit formula for degree elevation of irregular patches
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Thank you!
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