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- Wave- and heat-equation on surfaces
- Partial differential equations involving time
- Tutorial 11 – Electric fields on surfaces
- Laplace operator 2
- Triangulated surfaces with metric and the Plateau problem
- Dirichlet energy 2
- Gradient and Dirichlet energy on triangulated domains.
- Triangulated surfaces and domains
- Laplace operator 1
- Tutorial 10 – Discrete minimal surfaces
- Tutorial 9 – The Dirichlet problem
- Tutorial 8 – Flows on functions
- Tutorial 7 – Visualization of gradient fields
- Random Fourier polynomials
- Tutorial 6: Close-to-conformal parametrizations of Hopf tori
- Tutorial 5: Lawson’s minimal surfaces and the Sudanese Möbius band
- The 3-Sphere
- Tutorial 4: Hyperbolic helicoids
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- Conformal maps III: Stereographic Projection
- Conformal Maps II: Inversions
- Quaternions
- Tutorial 2: Framed Discrete Curves
- Mandelbrot Set
- Conformal Maps I: Holomorphic Functions
- Conformal Parametrizations of Surfaces
- Parallel Frame for Curves
- Arclength-Parametrized Curves
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- Tutorial 1: Implicit Surfaces with Houdini
- Creating Geometry From Scratch
- Combinatorial Geometry in Houdini
- Combinatorial Geometry: Simplicial Complexes
- Combinatorial Geometry: Cell Complexes
- Scenes with White Background
- Simple Ambient Scenes
- Visualizing Discrete Geometry with Houdini II
- Rendering and Working with Cameras
- Visualizing Discrete Geometry with Houdini I
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Category Archives: Lecture
Wave- and heat-equation on surfaces
Wave equation Let $M$ be a surface and $f : \mathbb{R} \times M \rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ a function. The wave equation is given by: \[\ddot{f} = \Delta f.\] After the space discretization we have $f:\mathbb{R} \times V \rightarrow \mathbb{R},$ $p:= \left(\begin{matrix} … Continue reading
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Partial differential equations involving time
Let $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^n$ be a domain, we will consider $\Omega$ to be the “space” and functions: \begin{align} f : \mathbb{R} \times \Omega \rightarrow \mathbb{R}, \\ (t,x) \mapsto f(t,x),\end{align} will be view as time dependent functions \begin{align} & f_t : … Continue reading
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Laplace operator 2
Let $M= \left(V, E, F \right)$ be an oriented triangulated surface without boundary and $p:V \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^3$ a realization. In earlier lectures we considered the space of piecewise linear functions on $M$: \[W_{PL}:=\left\{ \tilde{f} :M\rightarrow \mathbb{R} \, \big \vert \,\left. … Continue reading
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Triangulated surfaces with metric and the Plateau problem
Let $\Sigma = (V,E,F)$ be a triangulated surface (with boundary). A realization of the surface in $\mathbb{R}^3$ is given by a map $p:V \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^3$ such that $p_i,p_j,p_k$ form a non degenerated triangle in $\mathbb{R}^3$ for all $\{i,j,k\} \in \Sigma$, … Continue reading
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Dirichlet energy 2
Let $M = (V,E,F)$ be a triangulated domain in the plane where $V$ denotes the set of vertices, $E$ the set of edges and $F$ the set of triangles. We consider the set of functions on the vertices : \begin{align*} … Continue reading
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Gradient and Dirichlet energy on triangulated domains.
Let $M$ be a triangulated domain with the functionspace: \[W_{PL}:=\bigl\{f:M\rightarrow\mathbb{R}\,\bigl\vert\bigr.\,\,\,\left. f\right|_{T_{\sigma}} \mbox{ is affine for all } \sigma \in \Sigma_2 \bigr\}.\] On the interior of each triangle $T_{\sigma}$ in $M$ the gradient of a function $g \in W$ is well … Continue reading
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Triangulated surfaces and domains
We want to derive a discrete version of the laplace operator defined on triangulated surfaces. At first we will define what a triangulated surface with and without boundary is, and consider triangulated domains of $\mathbb{R}^2$ as an important example. Let … Continue reading
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Laplace operator 1
Let $M \subset \mathbb{R}^2$ be a domain with smooth boundary $\partial M$ and outpointing normal vector field $N$. For a smooth function $f \in C^{\infty}(M,\mathbb{R})$ the gradient vector field $\mbox{grad} \, f :M \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^2$ is defined as : \[ … Continue reading
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Random Fourier polynomials
What is a typical function? The answer of this question certainly depends on the branch of mathematics you are into – while functions in differential geometry are usually smooth, the wiggling graphs appearing at the stock market are far from … Continue reading
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The 3-Sphere
So far we have seen geometries in 2D and 3D, which are the dimensions we are familiar with. But mathematician have found interesting geometries in higher dimensions and it would be great if we could visualize them. In particular a huge … Continue reading
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