Topological reconstruction of sampled surfaces via Morse theory
In this work, we study the perception problem for sampled surfaces (possibly with boundary) using tools from computational topology, specifically, how to identify their underlying topology starting from point-cloud samples in space, such as those obtained with 3D scanners. We present a reconstructio...
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Zusammenfassung: | In this work, we study the perception problem for sampled surfaces (possibly
with boundary) using tools from computational topology, specifically, how to
identify their underlying topology starting from point-cloud samples in space,
such as those obtained with 3D scanners. We present a reconstruction algorithm
based on a careful topological study of the point sample that allows us to
obtain a cellular decomposition of it using a Morse function. No triangulation
or local implicit equations are used as intermediate steps, avoiding in this
way reconstruction-induced artifices. The algorithm can be run without any
prior knowledge of the surface topology, density or regularity of the
point-sample. The results consist of a piece-wise decomposition of the given
surface as a union of Morse cells (i.e. topological disks), suitable for tasks
such as mesh-independent reparametrization or noise-filtering, and a small-rank
cellular complex determining the topology of the surface. The algorithm, which
we test with several real and synthetic surfaces, can be applied to smooth
surfaces with or without boundary, embedded in an ambient space of any
dimension. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.17257 |