78 research outputs found
Doubly periodic textile patterns
Knitted and woven textile structures are examples of doubly periodic
structures in a thickened plane made out of intertwining strands of yarn.
Factoring out the group of translation symmetries of such a structure gives
rise to a link diagram in a thickened torus. Such a diagram on a standard torus
is converted into a classical link by including two auxiliary components which
form the cores of the complementary solid tori. The resulting link, called a
kernel for the structure, is determined by a choice of generators u and v for
the group of symmetries.
A normalised form of the multi-variable Alexander polynomial of a kernel is
used to provide polynomial invariants of the original structure which are
essentially independent of the choice of generators. It gives immediate
information about the existence of closed curves and other topological features
in the original textile structure. Because of its natural algebraic properties
under coverings we can recover the polynomial for kernels based on a proper
subgroup from the polynomial derived from the full symmetry group of the
structure. This enables two structures to be compared at similar scales, even
when one has a much smaller minimal repeating cell than the other.
Examples of simple traditional structures are given, and their Alexander data
polynomials are presented to illustrate the techniques and results.Comment: 27 pages, 22 figure
APPROACHES TO THE ESTIMATION OF THE LEVEL OF FORMATION OF PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCES OF GRADUATES OF THE SPO IN MODERN CONDITIONS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF FGOS SPO
В статье рассматриваются возможности использования технологий активного обучения для формирования профессиональной компетентности будущего педагогаThe article describes the potentiality of active learning technologies for forming of professional-pedagogical competenc
Drawing bobbin lace graphs, or, Fundamental cycles for a subclass of periodic graphs
In this paper, we study a class of graph drawings that arise from bobbin lace
patterns. The drawings are periodic and require a combinatorial embedding with
specific properties which we outline and demonstrate can be verified in linear
time. In addition, a lace graph drawing has a topological requirement: it
contains a set of non-contractible directed cycles which must be homotopic to
, that is, when drawn on a torus, each cycle wraps once around the minor
meridian axis and zero times around the major longitude axis. We provide an
algorithm for finding the two fundamental cycles of a canonical rectangular
schema in a supergraph that enforces this topological constraint. The polygonal
schema is then used to produce a straight-line drawing of the lace graph inside
a rectangular frame. We argue that such a polygonal schema always exists for
combinatorial embeddings satisfying the conditions of bobbin lace patterns, and
that we can therefore create a pattern, given a graph with a fixed
combinatorial embedding of genus one.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
A systematic approach towards the design of a multi-layered woven fabric: modelling the structure of a multi-layered woven fabric
This paper introduced an innovative method of description of the structure of multi-layered woven fabrics (MLWF). The method enables a complicated design procedure for the MLWF to be reduced to the much simpler design process of a single-layer woven fabric using conventional CAD systems. The method can be applied to all types of common MLWF including orthogonal and angle-interlock woven structures. This method will be widely used in the textile industry for the design of multi-layered woven fabrics and by the software companies which provide CAD/CAM systems for the industry
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