9 research outputs found
Helical polynomial curves and double Pythagorean hodographs II. Enumeration of low-degree curves
AbstractA “double” Pythagorean-hodograph (DPH) curve r(t) is characterized by the property that |r′(t)| and |r′(t)×r″(t)| are both polynomials in the curve parameter t. Such curves possess rational Frenet frames and curvature/torsion functions, and encompass all helical polynomial curves as special cases. As noted by Beltran and Monterde, the Hopf map representation of spatial PH curves appears better suited to the analysis of DPH curves than the quaternion form. A categorization of all DPH curve types up to degree 7 is developed using the Hopf map form, together with algorithms for their construction, and a selection of computed examples of (both helical and non-helical) DPH curves is included, to highlight their attractive features. For helical curves, a separate constructive approach proposed by Monterde, based upon the inverse stereographic projection of rational line/circle descriptions in the complex plane, is used to classify all types up to degree 7. Criteria to distinguish between the helical and non-helical DPH curves, in the context of the general construction procedures, are also discussed
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Construction of periodic adapted orthonormal frames on closed space curves
The construction of continuous adapted orthonormal frames along C1 closed–loop spatial curves is addressed. Such frames are important in the design of periodic spatial rigid–body motions along smooth closed paths. The construction is illustrated through the simplest non–trivial context — namely, C1 closed loops defined by a single Pythagorean–hodograph (PH) quintic space curve of a prescribed total arc length. It is shown that such curves comprise a two–parameter family, dependent on two angular variables, and they degenerate to planar curves when these parameters differ by an integer multiple of π. The desired frame is constructed through a rotation applied to the normal–plane vectors of the Euler–Rodrigues frame, so as to interpolate a given initial/final frame orientation. A general solution for periodic adapted frames of minimal twist on C1 closed–loop PH curves is possible, although this incurs transcendental terms. However, the C1 closed–loop PH quintics admit particularly simple rational periodic adapted frames
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Mapping rational rotation-minimizing frames from polynomial curves on to rational curves
Given a polynomial space curve r(ξ) that has a rational rotation–minimizing frame (an RRMF curve), a methodology is developed to construct families of rational space curves r˜(ξ) with the same rotation–minimizing frame as r(ξ) at corresponding points. The construction employs the dual form of a rational space curve, interpreted as the edge of regression of the envelope of a family of osculating planes, having normals in the direction u(ξ)=r′(ξ)×r″(ξ) and distances from the origin specified in terms of a rational function f(ξ) as f(ξ)/‖u(ξ)‖. An explicit characterization of the rational curves r˜(ξ) generated by a given RRMF curve r(ξ) in this manner is developed, and the problem of matching initial and final points and frames is shown to impose only linear conditions on the coefficients of f(ξ), obviating the non–linear equations (and existence questions) that arise in addressing this problem with the RRMF curve r(ξ). Criteria for identifying low–degree instances of the curves r˜(ξ) are identified, by a cancellation of factors common to their numerators and denominators, and the methodology is illustrated by a number of computed examples