Alternatives to Delaunay triangulation
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Hello,
I am in need of calculating the volume of a shape that is given as a cloud of points. I thought a first step would be to triangulate using delaunay but the results are not satisfactory. I have attached some images to show what is unsatisfactory. I zoomed in to look at a part of the cloud that is kind of shaped like the cone of an airplane. I have provided two angles so a sense can be gotten. The super elongated triangles do not seem like they will be useful in getting me surface area and volume.
Does anyone know of alternatives that would produce better results?
Thanks.
4 comentarios
Respuestas (4)
Richard Brown
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
Editada: Richard Brown
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
As David Wilson suggested, use alphashape:
U = csvread('Coords.txt');
shp = alphashape(U(:, 1), U(:, 2), U(:, 3));
plot(shp)
disp(shp.vol)
I get a volume of 3.59e-8. The picture is here:
Or, I just noticed that the commands are different in R2019a (I did the previous with R2018a by accident):
U = csvread('Coords.txt');
shp = alphaShape(U(:, 1), U(:, 2), U(:, 3));
plot(shp)
disp(shp.volume)
0 comentarios
darova
el 6 de Nov. de 2019
Volume can be found as summation volume of pyramids. Here is an idea:
clc,clear
load Coords.txt
x = Coords(:,1);
y = Coords(:,2);
z = Coords(:,3);
% move to origin
x = x-mean(x);
y = y-mean(y);
z = z-mean(z);
% convert to spherical system
[t,p,r] = cart2sph(x,y,z);
tri = delaunay(t,p);
trisurf(tri,x,y,z)
% indices of triangle
i1 = tri(:,1);
i2 = tri(:,2);
i3 = tri(:,3);
% vectors of triangle base
v1 = [x(i1)-x(i2) y(i1)-y(i2) z(i1)-z(i2)];
v2 = [x(i1)-x(i3) y(i1)-y(i3) z(i1)-z(i3)];
A = 1/2*cross(v1,v2,2); % surface of a triangle
V = 1/3*dot(A,[x(i1) y(i1) z(i1)],2); % volume of a triangle
V = sum(abs(V));
3 comentarios
darova
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
Maybe it's because of wrong triangulation in this place:
alphashape should be cool in this case then
darova
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
Editada: darova
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
It's because of converting cartesian coordinates to spherical
[t,p,r] = cart2sph(x,y,z);
Geometrically -pi and +pi are the same, but delaunay interprets it as different numbers.
That is why there is a gap between -pi and +pi
Don't know how to resolve it
David Winthrop
el 7 de Nov. de 2019
5 comentarios
M.S. Khan
el 31 de Mayo de 2020
David, could you plz explain how you applied trgingulations.
regards,
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