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This is one of the first books on a newly emerging field of
discrete differential geometry and an excellent way to access this
exciting area. It surveys the fascinating connections between
discrete models in differential geometry and complex analysis,
integrable systems and applications in computer graphics. The
authors take a closer look at discrete models in differential
geometry and dynamical systems. Their curves are polygonal,
surfaces are made from triangles and quadrilaterals, and time is
discrete. Nevertheless, the difference between the corresponding
smooth curves, surfaces and classical dynamical systems with
continuous time can hardly be seen. This is the paradigm of
structure-preserving discretizations. Current advances in this
field are stimulated to a large extent by its relevance for
computer graphics and mathematical physics. This book is written by
specialists working together on a common research project. It is
about differential geometry and dynamical systems, smooth and
discrete theories, and on pure mathematics and its practical
applications. The interaction of these facets is demonstrated by
concrete examples, including discrete conformal mappings, discrete
complex analysis, discrete curvatures and special surfaces,
discrete integrable systems, conformal texture mappings in computer
graphics, and free-form architecture. This richly illustrated book
will convince readers that this new branch of mathematics is both
beautiful and useful. It will appeal to graduate students and
researchers in differential geometry, complex analysis,
mathematical physics, numerical methods, discrete geometry, as well
as computer graphics and geometry processing.
This is one of the first books on a newly emerging field of
discrete differential geometry and an excellent way to access this
exciting area. It surveys the fascinating connections between
discrete models in differential geometry and complex analysis,
integrable systems and applications in computer graphics. The
authors take a closer look at discrete models in differential
geometry and dynamical systems. Their curves are polygonal,
surfaces are made from triangles and quadrilaterals, and time is
discrete. Nevertheless, the difference between the corresponding
smooth curves, surfaces and classical dynamical systems with
continuous time can hardly be seen. This is the paradigm of
structure-preserving discretizations. Current advances in this
field are stimulated to a large extent by its relevance for
computer graphics and mathematical physics. This book is written by
specialists working together on a common research project. It is
about differential geometry and dynamical systems, smooth and
discrete theories, and on pure mathematics and its practical
applications. The interaction of these facets is demonstrated by
concrete examples, including discrete conformal mappings, discrete
complex analysis, discrete curvatures and special surfaces,
discrete integrable systems, conformal texture mappings in computer
graphics, and free-form architecture. This richly illustrated book
will convince readers that this new branch of mathematics is both
beautiful and useful. It will appeal to graduate students and
researchers in differential geometry, complex analysis,
mathematical physics, numerical methods, discrete geometry, as well
as computer graphics and geometry processing.
This volume offers a well-structured overview of existent
computational approaches to Riemann surfaces and those currently in
development. The authors of the contributions represent the groups
providing publically available numerical codes in this field. Thus
this volume illustrates which software tools are available and how
they can be used in practice. In addition examples for solutions to
partial differential equations and in surface theory are presented.
The intended audience of this book is twofold. It can be used as a
textbook for a graduate course in numerics of Riemann surfaces, in
which case the standard undergraduate background, i.e., calculus
and linear algebra, is required. In particular, no knowledge of the
theory of Riemann surfaces is expected; the necessary background in
this theory is contained in the Introduction chapter. At the same
time, this book is also intended for specialists in geometry and
mathematical physics applying the theory of Riemann surfaces in
their research. It is the first book on numerics of Riemann
surfaces that reflects the progress made in this field during the
last decade, and it contains original results. There are a growing
number of applications that involve the evaluation of concrete
characteristics of models analytically described in terms of
Riemann surfaces. Many problem settings and computations in this
volume are motivated by such concrete applications in geometry and
mathematical physics.
Discrete differential geometry is an active mathematical terrain
where differential geometry and discrete geometry meet and
interact. It provides discrete equivalents of the geometric notions
and methods of differential geometry, such as notions of curvature
and integrability for polyhedral surfaces. Current progress in this
field is to a large extent stimulated by its relevance for computer
graphics and mathematical physics. This collection of essays, which
documents the main lectures of the 2004 Oberwolfach Seminar on the
topic, as well as a number of additional contributions by key
participants, gives a lively, multi-facetted introduction to this
emerging field.
This book brings together two different branches of mathematics: the theory of Painlevé and the theory of surfaces. Self-contained introductions to both these fields are presented. It is shown how some classical problems in surface theory can be solved using the modern theory of Painlevé equations. In particular, an essential part of the book is devoted to Bonnet surfaces, i.e. to surfaces possessing families of isometries preserving the mean curvature function. A global classification of Bonnet surfaces is given using both ingredients of the theory of Painlevé equations: the theory of isomonodromic deformation and the Painlevé property. The book is illustrated by plots of surfaces. It is intended to be used by mathematicians and graduate students interested in differential geometry and Painlevé equations. Researchers working in one of these areas can become familiar with another relevant branch of mathematics.
This textbook is a comprehensive and yet accessible introduction to
non-Euclidean Laguerre geometry, for which there exists no previous
systematic presentation in the literature. Moreover, we present new
results by demonstrating all essential features of Laguerre
geometry on the example of checkerboard incircular nets. Classical
(Euclidean) Laguerre geometry studies oriented hyperplanes,
oriented hyperspheres, and their oriented contact in Euclidean
space. We describe how this can be generalized to arbitrary
Cayley-Klein spaces, in particular hyperbolic and elliptic space,
and study the corresponding groups of Laguerre transformations. We
give an introduction to Lie geometry and describe how these
Laguerre geometries can be obtained as subgeometries. As an
application of two-dimensional Lie and Laguerre geometry we study
the properties of checkerboard incircular nets.
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