Nirel, DanLischinski, DaniGutierrez, Diego and Sheffer, Alla2018-04-142018-04-1420181467-8659https://doi.org/10.1111/cgf.13357https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.1111/cgf13357Handling collisions among a large number of bodies can be a performance bottleneck in video games and many other real-time applications. We present a new framework for detecting and resolving collisions using the penetration volume as an interpenetration measure. Given two non-convex polyhedral bodies, a new sampling paradigm locates their near-contact configurations in advance, and stores associated contact information in a compact database. At runtime, we retrieve a given configuration's nearest neighbors. By taking advantage of the penetration volume's continuity, cheap geometric methods can use the neighbors to estimate contact information as well as a translational gradient. This results in an extremely fast, geometry-independent, and trivially parallelizable computation, which constitutes the first global volume-based collision resolution. When processing multiple collisions simultaneously on a 4-core processor, the average running cost is as low as 5 μs. Furthermore, no additional proximity or contact-regions queries are required. These results are orders of magnitude faster than previous penetration volume approaches.Computing methodologiesCollision detectionPhysical simulationFast Penetration Volume for Rigid Bodies10.1111/cgf.13357239-250