Overview
- Authors:
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Tor Dokken
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SINTEF Applied Mathematics, Oslo, Norway
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Bert Jüttler
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Institute of Applied Geometry, Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria
- High-profile topics with industrial applications
- Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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Table of contents (16 papers)
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- G. Gatellier, A. Labrouzy, B. Mourrain, J. P. Técourt
Pages 27-43
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- Sonia Pérez-Díaz, Juana Sendra, J.Rafael Sendra
Pages 45-61
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- Kȩstutis Karčciauskas, Jörg Peters
Pages 119-134
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- Huahao Shou, Ralph Martin, Guojin Wang, Adrian Bowyer, Irina Voiculescu
Pages 135-154
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- Panagiotis Kaklis, Spyridon Dellas
Pages 183-192
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- Rimvydas Krasauskas, Margarita Kazakevičiūté
Pages 213-231
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About this book
This volume contains revised papers that were presented at the international workshop entitled Computational Methods for Algebraic Spline Surfaces (“COMPASS”), which was held from September 29 to October 3, 2003, at Schloß Weinberg, Kefermarkt (A- tria). The workshop was mainly devoted to approximate algebraic geometry and its - plications. The organizers wanted to emphasize the novel idea of approximate implici- zation, that has strengthened the existing link between CAD / CAGD (Computer Aided Geometric Design) and classical algebraic geometry. The existing methods for exact implicitization (i. e. , for conversion from the parametric to an implicit representation of a curve or surface) require exact arithmetic and are too slow and too expensive for industrial use. Thus the duality of an implicit representation and a parametric repres- tation is only used for low degree algebraic surfaces such as planes, spheres, cylinders, cones and toroidal surfaces. On the other hand, this duality is a very useful tool for - veloping ef?cient algorithms. Approximate implicitization makes this duality available for general curves and surfaces. The traditional exact implicitization of parametric surfaces produce global rep- sentations, which are exact everywhere. The surface patches used in CAD, however, are always de?ned within a small box only; they are obtained for a bounded parameter domain (typically a rectangle, or – in the case of “trimmed” surface patches – a subset of a rectangle). Consequently, a globally exact representation is not really needed in practice.
Authors and Affiliations
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SINTEF Applied Mathematics, Oslo, Norway
Tor Dokken
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Institute of Applied Geometry, Johannes Kepler University, Linz, Austria
Bert Jüttler