26 research outputs found
Classifying the Isolated Zeros of Asymptotic Gravitational Radiation by Tendex and Vortex Lines
A new method to visualize the curvature of spacetime was recently proposed.
This method finds the eigenvectors of the "electric" and "magnetic" components
of the Weyl tensor and, in analogy to the field lines of electromagnetism, uses
the eigenvectors' integral curves to illustrate the spacetime curvature. Here
we use this approach, along with well-known topological properties of fields on
closed surfaces, to show that an arbitrary, radiating, asymptotically flat
spacetime must have points near null infinity where the gravitational radiation
vanishes. At the zeros of the gravitational radiation, the field of integral
curves develops singular features analogous to the critical points of a vector
field. We can, therefore, apply the topological classification of singular
points of unoriented lines as a method to describe the radiation field. We
provide examples of the structure of these points using linearized gravity and
discuss an application to the extreme-kick black-hole-binary merger.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. Changed to reflect published version, sign
errors fixe
Simple quad domains for field aligned mesh parametrization
We present a method for the global parametrization of meshes that preserves alignment to a cross field in input while obtaining a parametric domain made of few coarse axis-aligned rectangular patches, which form an abstract base complex without T-junctions. The method is based on the topological simplification of the cross field in input, followed by global smoothing
Tensor Glyph Warping – Visualizing Metric Tensor Fields using Riemannian Exponential Maps
Summary. The Riemannian exponential map, and its inverse the Riemannian logarithm map, can be used to visualize metric tensor fields. In this chapter we first derive the well-known metric sphere glyph from the geodesic equations, where the tensor field to be visualized is regarded as the metric of a manifold. These glyphs capture the appearance of the tensors relative to the coordinate system of the human observer. We then introduce two new concepts for metric tensor field visualization: geodesic spheres and geodesically warped glyphs. These additions make it possible not only to visualize tensor anisotropy, but also the curvature and change in tensorshape in a local neighborhood. The framework is based on the exp p (v i) and log p (q) maps, which can be computed by solving a second order Ordinary Differential Equation (ODE) or by manipulating the geodesic distance function. The latter can be found by solving the eikonal equation, a non-linear Partial Differential Equation (PDE), or it can be derived analytically for some manifolds. To avoid heavy calculations, we also include first and second order Taylor approximations to exp and log. In our experiments, these are shown to be sufficiently accurate to produce glyphs that visually characterize anisotropy, curvature and shape-derivatives in smooth tensor fields.