15,602 research outputs found
Consistent ICP for the registration of sparse and inhomogeneous point clouds
In this paper, we derive a novel iterative closest point (ICP) technique that performs point cloud alignment in a robust and consistent way. Traditional ICP techniques minimize the point-to-point distances, which are successful when point clouds contain no noise or clutter and moreover are dense and more or less uniformly sampled. In the other case, it is better to employ point-to-plane or other metrics to locally approximate the surface of the objects. However, the point-to-plane metric does not yield a symmetric solution, i.e. the estimated transformation of point cloud p to point cloud q is not necessarily equal to the inverse transformation of point cloud q to point cloud p. In order to improve ICP, we will enforce such symmetry constraints as prior knowledge and make it also robust to noise and clutter. Experimental results show that our method is indeed much more consistent and accurate in presence of noise and clutter compared to existing ICP algorithms
ADAM: a general method for using various data types in asteroid reconstruction
We introduce ADAM, the All-Data Asteroid Modelling algorithm. ADAM is simple
and universal since it handles all disk-resolved data types (adaptive optics or
other images, interferometry, and range-Doppler radar data) in a uniform manner
via the 2D Fourier transform, enabling fast convergence in model optimization.
The resolved data can be combined with disk-integrated data (photometry). In
the reconstruction process, the difference between each data type is only a few
code lines defining the particular generalized projection from 3D onto a 2D
image plane. Occultation timings can be included as sparse silhouettes, and
thermal infrared data are efficiently handled with an approximate algorithm
that is sufficient in practice due to the dominance of the high-contrast
(boundary) pixels over the low-contrast (interior) ones. This is of particular
importance to the raw ALMA data that can be directly handled by ADAM without
having to construct the standard image. We study the reliability of the
inversion by using the independent shape supports of function series and
control-point surfaces. When other data are lacking, one can carry out fast
nonconvex lightcurve-only inversion, but any shape models resulting from it
should only be taken as illustrative global-scale ones.Comment: 11 pages, submitted to A&
Making Laplacians commute
In this paper, we construct multimodal spectral geometry by finding a pair of
closest commuting operators (CCO) to a given pair of Laplacians. The CCOs are
jointly diagonalizable and hence have the same eigenbasis. Our construction
naturally extends classical data analysis tools based on spectral geometry,
such as diffusion maps and spectral clustering. We provide several synthetic
and real examples of applications in dimensionality reduction, shape analysis,
and clustering, demonstrating that our method better captures the inherent
structure of multi-modal data
Modal characterization of the ASCIE segmented optics testbed: New algorithms and experimental results
New frequency response measurement procedures, on-line modal tuning techniques, and off-line modal identification algorithms are developed and applied to the modal identification of the Advanced Structures/Controls Integrated Experiment (ASCIE), a generic segmented optics telescope test-bed representative of future complex space structures. The frequency response measurement procedure uses all the actuators simultaneously to excite the structure and all the sensors to measure the structural response so that all the transfer functions are measured simultaneously. Structural responses to sinusoidal excitations are measured and analyzed to calculate spectral responses. The spectral responses in turn are analyzed as the spectral data become available and, which is new, the results are used to maintain high quality measurements. Data acquisition, processing, and checking procedures are fully automated. As the acquisition of the frequency response progresses, an on-line algorithm keeps track of the actuator force distribution that maximizes the structural response to automatically tune to a structural mode when approaching a resonant frequency. This tuning is insensitive to delays, ill-conditioning, and nonproportional damping. Experimental results show that is useful for modal surveys even in high modal density regions. For thorough modeling, a constructive procedure is proposed to identify the dynamics of a complex system from its frequency response with the minimization of a least-squares cost function as a desirable objective. This procedure relies on off-line modal separation algorithms to extract modal information and on least-squares parameter subset optimization to combine the modal results and globally fit the modal parameters to the measured data. The modal separation algorithms resolved modal density of 5 modes/Hz in the ASCIE experiment. They promise to be useful in many challenging applications
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