The focal geometry of circular and conical meshes

Helmut Pottmann*, Johannes Wallner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

56 Scopus citations

Abstract

Circular meshes are quadrilateral meshes all of whose faces possess a circumcircle, whereas conical meshes are planar quadrilateral meshes where the faces which meet in a vertex are tangent to a right circular cone. Both are amenable to geometric modeling - recently surface approximation and subdivision-like refinement processes have been studied. In this paper we extend the original defining property of conical meshes, namely the existence of face/face offset meshes at constant distance, to circular meshes. We study the close relation between circular and conical meshes, their vertex/vertex and face/face offsets, as well as their discrete normals and focal meshes. In particular we show how to construct a two-parameter family of circular (resp., conical) meshes from a given conical (resp., circular) mesh. We further discuss meshes which have both properties and their relation to discrete surfaces of negative Gaussian curvature. The offset properties of special quadrilateral meshes and the three-dimensional support structures derived from them are highly relevant for computational architectural design of freeform structures. Another aspect important for design is that both circular and conical meshes provide a discretization of the principal curvature lines of a smooth surface, so the mesh polylines represent principal features of the surface described by the mesh.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)249-268
Number of pages20
JournalAdvances in Computational Mathematics
Volume29
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2008
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Architectural design
  • Circular meshes
  • Conical meshes
  • Discrete differential geometry
  • Focal meshes
  • Geometric modeling
  • Integrable systems
  • Offset meshes
  • Quadrilateral meshes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Computational Mathematics
  • Applied Mathematics

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