'Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)'
Doi
Abstract
Hypertextures are a useful modelling tool in that they
can add three-dimensional detail to the surface of otherwise
smooth objects. Hypertextures can be rendered as implicit
surfaces, resulting in objects with a complex but well
defined boundary. However, representing a hypertexture as
an implicit surface often results in many small parts being
detached from the main surface, turning an object into a
disconnected set. Depending on the context, this can detract
from the realism in a scene where one usually does not
expect a solid object to have clouds of smaller objects floating around it. We present a topology correction technique, integrated in a ray casting algorithm for hypertextured implicit surfaces, that detects and removes all the surface components that have become disconnected from the main surface. Our method works with implicit surfaces that are C2 continuous and uses Morse theory to find the critical points of the surface. The method follows the separatrix lines joining the critical points to isolate disconnected components