Geometric modeling
Geometric modeling is a branch of applied mathematics and computational geometry that studies methods and algorithms for the mathematical description of shapes.
The shapes studied in geometric modeling are mostly two- or three-dimensional, although many of its tools and principles can be applied to sets of any finite dimension. Today most geometric modeling is done with computers and for computer-based applications. Two-dimensional models are important in computer typography and technical drawing. Three-dimensional models are central to computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM), and widely used in many applied technical fields such as civil and mechanical engineering, architecture, geology and medical image processing. [1]
Geometric models are usually distinguished from procedural and object-oriented models, which define the shape implicitly by an opaque algorithm that generates its appearance. They are also contrasted with digital images and volumetric models which represent the shape as a subset of a fine regular partition of space; and with fractal models that give an infinitely recursive definition of the shape. However, these distinctions are often blurred: for instance, a digital image can be interpreted as a collection of colored squares; and geometric shapes such as circles are defined by implicit mathematical equations. Also, a fractal model yields a parametric or implicit model when its recursive definition is truncated to a finite depth.
References
- ↑ Farin, G.: A History of Curves and Surfaces in CAGD, Handbook of Computer Aided Geometric Design
See also
- Architectural geometry
- Computer-aided engineering
- Computer-aided manufacturing
- Computational topology
- Digital geometry
- List of interactive geometry software
- Parametric curves
- Parametric surfaces
- Solid modeling
- Space partitioning
- Wikiversity:Topic:Computational geometry
External links
- Geometric Modeling and Industrial Geometry
- Related Wolfram Demonstration Projects
- K. T. Wong, Y. I. Wu & M. Abdulla, “Landmobile Radiowave Multipaths' DOA-Distribution: Assessing Geometric Models by the Open Literature's Empirical Datasets,” IEEE Transactions on Antennas & Propagation, vol. 58, no. 2, pp. 946-958, February 2010.
- Geometry and Algorithms for CAD (Lecture Note, TU Darmstadt)