Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B3)

     
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
    
   
   
    
    
     
     
  
    
     
     
   
    
   
   
   
    
   
    
  
    
      
     
      
  
  
   
    
mble over 
be approx- 
legree four 
dge turned 
id minimi- 
es are flat) 
ermined by 
egree three 
re no three 
ALAS 1 it 
| weakly in 
ngly in the 
position of 
s not have 
nals. Thus 
s along the 
is, tumbles 
tend to be 
nplied. In- 
jined func- 
0,1]. (9) 
f the func- 
the spring 
applied to 
vo subdivi- 
it o-values 
the net is 
well. The 
1 the same 
on 
le with the 
ase a face 
could not 
rmanently, 
n must be 
ne they are 
Figure 6: Approximation with surface energy minimization 
used, it is sufficient to divide the patch that cannot fullfil the 
criterion. 
6 CONCLUDING REMARKS 
Due to the parametrization of the surface over a TIN, this 
approach obtains a universality which allows one to model 
surfaces of abitrary topology. Because of the use of the sur- 
face normals at the vertices of the triangles, it is furthermore 
very flexible in the adaption of the subsistent data: 
e Breaklines can be taken into account by giving two nor- 
mal vectors to those surface points that are situated 
along the breaklines, one for each side. Only points 
lying on the appropriate side of the breakline may in- 
fluence the estimation process of the surface normal. 
e Structure lines, e.g. mountain ridges or the bottom of 
a valley, may be taken into account by an appropriate 
triangulation and choice of the surface normals and the 
tangent plane field. 
e Contour lines, e.g. digitized from a map, are perpen- 
dicular to the surface normals, and hilltops are points 
with known surface normals. This can be exploited in 
the estimation of the normals by introducing constraints 
for the derivatives. 
This is a preliminary report on our progress in a larger re- 
search project. Further studies are necessary, such as data re- 
duction by appropriate preprocessing, hierarchical modelling, 
refined estimation techniques and others. 
Acknowledgements. This research has been supported by 
the Austrian Science Foundation through project P274-PHY. 
We would also like to thank H. Kager for fruitful and stimu- 
lating discussions. 
643 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B3. Vienna 1996 
REFERENCES 
[Eck,1995] Eck, M., DeRose, T., Duchamp, T., Hoppe, H., 
Lounsbery, M., Stuetzle, W., Multiresolution analysis of 
arbitrary meshes. Computer Graphics 29 (SIGGRAPH'95 
Proceedings). 
[Greiner,1994] Greiner, G., 1994. Variational design and fair- 
ing. In: Proceedings EUROGRAPHICS'94, Blackwell Pub- 
lishers, Cambridge. 
[Halmer,1996] Halmer, A., Heitzinger, D., Kager, H., 1996. 
3D-Surface Modelling with Basic Topological Elements. 
In: International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote 
Sensing, Vienna, Austria, Vol. XXXI, Commission 4. 
[Hoschek,1993] Hoschek, J., Lasser, D., 1993. Fundamentals 
of Computer Aided Geometric Design. A K Peters Ltd., 
Massachusetts. 
[Kobbelt,1995] Kobbelt, L., 1995. Iterative Erzeugung glatter 
Interpolanten. Shaker, Aachen. 
[Kolb,1995] Kolb, A., Pottmann, H., Seidel, H.P., 1995. Fair 
Surface Reconstruction Using Quadratic Functionals. In: 
EUROGRAPHICS '95, Blackwell Publishers, Cambridge. 
[Mann,1992] Mann, S., 1992. Surface approximation using 
geometric Hermite patches. PhD thesis, Univ. of Washing- 
ton, Seattle, USA. 
[Opitz,1994] Opitz, K., Pottmann, H., 1994. Computing 
shortest paths on polyhedra: applications in geometric 
modeling and scientific visualization. Int. J. Computational 
Geometry & Applications 4, 165-178. 
[Peters,1995] Peters, J., 1995. C'-surface splines. SIAM J. 
Numer. Anal. 32, 645-666. 
[Wild, 1983] Wild, E., 1983. Die Pradiktion mit Gewichts- 
funktionen und deren Anwendung zur Beschreibung von 
Gelandeflachen bei topographischen Gelandeaufnahmen. 
Deutsche Geodatische Kommission, Reihe C, Bayerische 
Akademie der Wissenschaften, München.
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.