Discrete geodesic graph (DGG) for computing geodesic distances on polyhedral surfaces
Polyhedral Surfaces
Geodesic Distances
0102 computer and information sciences
01 natural sciences
004
510
DOI:
10.1016/j.cagd.2017.03.010
Publication Date:
2017-03-29T07:02:42Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
We present a new graph-based method, called discrete geodesic graph (DGG), to compute discrete geodesics in a divide-and-conquer manner. Let M be a manifold triangle mesh with n vertices and >0 the given accuracy parameter. Assume the vertices are uniformly distributed on the input mesh. We show that the DGG associated to M has O(n) edges and the shortest path distances on the graph approximate geodesic distances on M with relative error O(). Computational results show that the actual error is less than 0.6 on common models. Taking advantage of DGG's unique features, we develop a DGG-tailored label-correcting algorithm that computes geodesic distances in empirically linear time. With DGG, we can guarantee the computed distances are true distance metrics, which is highly desired in many applications. We observe that DGG significantly outperforms saddle vertex graph (SVG) another graph based method for discrete geodesics in terms of graph size, accuracy control and runtime performance. A new graph-based method for computing geodesic distances on manifold triangle meshes.It allows user to directly specify the accuracy, and runs empirically linear time.It outperforms saddle vertex graph in terms of graph size, accuracy control and runtime performance.
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