Issue 3
https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/111
EG Conference Issue2024-03-19T13:45:18ZAnimation of Bubbles in Liquid
https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/8793
Animation of Bubbles in Liquid
Hong, Jeong-Mo; Kim, Chang-Hun
We present a new fluid animation technique in which liquid and gas interact with each other, using the exampleof bubbles rising in water. In contrast to previous studies which only focused on one fluid, our system considersboth the liquid and the gas simultaneously. In addition to the flowing motion, the interactions between liquid andgas cause buoyancy, surface tension, deformation and movement of the bubbles. For the natural manipulationof topological changes and the removal of the numerical diffusion, we combine the volume-of-fluid method andthe front-tracking method developed in the field of computational fluid dynamics. Our minimum-stress surfacetension method enables this complementary combination. The interfaces are constructed using the marching cubesalgorithm. Optical effects are rendered using vertex shader techniques.Categories and Subject Descriptors (according to ACM CCS): I.3.7 [Computer Graphics]: Animation
2003-01-01T00:00:00ZFreeform Shape Representations for Efficient Geometry Processing
https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/8792
Freeform Shape Representations for Efficient Geometry Processing
Kobbelt, Leif
The most important concepts for the handling and storage of freeform shapes in geometry processing applications are parametric representations and volumetric representations. Both have their specific advantages and drawbacks. While the algebraic complexity of volumetric representations is independent from the shape complexity, the domain of a parametric representation usually has to have the same structure as the surface itself (which sometimes makes it necessary to update the domain when the surface is modified).On the other hand, the topology of a parametrically defined surface can be controlled explicitly while in a volumetric representation, the surface topology can change accidentally during deformation. A volumetric representation reduces distance queries or inside/outside tests to mere function evaluations but the geodesic neighborhood relation between surface points is difficult to resolve. As a consequence, it seems promising to combine parametric and volumetric representations to effectively exploit both advantages.In this talk, a number of projects are presented and discussed in which such a combination leads to efficient and numerically stable algorithms for the solution of various geometry processing tasks. Applications include global error control for mesh decimation and smoothing, topology control for level-set surfaces, and shape modeling with unstructured point clouds.
2003-01-01T00:00:00ZA Few Good Lines: Suggestive Drawing of 3D Models
https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/8791
A Few Good Lines: Suggestive Drawing of 3D Models
Sousa, Mario Costa; Prusinkiewicz, Przemyslaw
We present a method for rendering 3D models in the traditionalline-drawing style used in artistic and scientificillustrations. The goal is to suggest the 3D shape of the objectsusing a small number of lines drawn with carefullychosen line qualities. The system combines several known techniquesinto a simple yet effective non-photorealisticline renderer. Feature edges related to the outline and interiorof a given 3D mesh are extracted, segmented, andsmoothed, yielding chains of lines with varying path, length, thickness,gaps, and enclosures. The paper includessample renderings obtained for a variety of models.
2003-01-01T00:00:00ZShieldTester: Cell-to-Cell Visibility Test for Surface Occluders
https://diglib.eg.org:443/handle/10.2312/8790
ShieldTester: Cell-to-Cell Visibility Test for Surface Occluders
Navazo, I.; Rossignac, J.; Jou, J.; Shariff, R.
We present a novel Cell-To-Cell Visibility (C2CV) algorithm, which given two polyhedra, AandBand a connectedand oriented manifold triangle mesh, S offers a simple, fast and conservative test for detecting when A and B areoccluded from each other by S. Previously disclosed C2CV algorithms either relied on costly occlusion fusion orwere restricted to convex or "apparently convex" occluders, which makes them inappropriate for scenes wherepotential occluders are arbitrary triangulated surfaces, such as the body of a car or a portion of a terrain. Thesimplicity of our C2CV algorithm, named ShieldTester, stems from a new Occlusion Theorem, introduced herewhich permits to establish occlusion by computing the intersection of S with a single ray from a vertex ofAtoa vertex ofB. ShieldTester may be used to establish that pairs of cells in a subdivision of space are hidden fromeach other by a relatively large surface occluder, so that when the viewer is in one cell, the objects in the othercell need not be displayed.Categories and Subject Descriptors (according to ACM CCS): I.3.3 [Computer Graphics]: Computational Geometryand Object Modeling: Occlussion Culling, Visibility Test, Triangle Meshes
2003-01-01T00:00:00Z