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Surface triangulation

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Surface triangulation

Triangulation of a surface means

  • a net of triangles, which covers a given surface partly or totally, or
  • the procedure of generating the points and triangles of such a net of triangles.
  • This article describes the generation of a net of triangles. In literature there are contributions which deal with the optimization of a given net.

    Surface triangulations are important for

  • visualizing surfaces and
  • the application of finite element methods.
  • The triangulation of a parametrically defined surface is an easy task. You just triangulate the area of definition (see second picture). But the images of these triangles in object space may vary in shape and extension, which may be a drawback. This drawback can be minimized by adaptive methods, which use 3D-informations (step width) while triangulating the parameter area.

    To triangulate an implicit surface (defined by one or more equations) is more difficult. There exist essentially two methods.

  • One method divides the 3D region of consideration into cubes and determines the intersections of the surface with the edges of the cubes in order to get polygons on the surface, which thereafter have to be triangulated (cutting cube method). The expenditure for managing the data is great.
  • The second and simpler concept is the marching method. The triangulation starts with a triangulated hexagon at a starting point. This hexagon is then surrounded by new triangles, following given rules, until the surface of consideration is triangulated. If the surface consists of several components, the algorithm has to be started several times using suitable starting points.
  • The cutting cube algorithm determines, at the same time, all components of the surface within the surrounding starting cube depending on prescribed limit parameters. An advantage of the marching method is the possibility to prescribe boundaries (see picture).

    Polygonizing a surface means to generate a polygon mesh.

    The triangulation of a surface should not be confused with the triangulation of a discrete prescribed plane set of points. See Delaunay triangulation.

    References

    Surface triangulation Wikipedia