Title :
Hybrid, Multiresolution Wires with Massless Frictional Contacts
Author :
Servin, Martin ; Lacoursière, Claude ; Nordfelth, Fredrik ; Bodin, Kenneth
Author_Institution :
Umea Univ., Umea, Sweden
fDate :
7/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We describe a method for the visual interactive simulation of wires contacting with rigid multibodies. The physical model used is a hybrid combining lumped elements and massless quasistatic representations. The latter is based on a kinematic constraint preserving the total length of the wire along a segmented path which can involve multiple bodies simultaneously and dry frictional contact nodes used for roping, lassoing, and fastening. These nodes provide stick and slide friction along the edges of the contacting geometries. The lumped element resolution is adapted dynamically based on local stability criteria, becoming coarser as the tension increases, and up to the purely kinematic representation. Kinematic segments and contact nodes are added, deleted, and propagated based on contact geometries and dry friction configurations. The method gives a dramatic increase in both performance and robustness because it quickly decimates superfluous nodes without loosing stability, yet adapts to complex configurations with many contacts and high curvature, keeping a fixed, large integration time step. Numerical results demonstrating the performance and stability of the adaptive multiresolution scheme are presented along with an array of representative simulation examples illustrating the versatility of the frictional contact model.
Keywords :
computer animation; friction; mechanical contact; mechanical engineering computing; wires; dry frictional contact nodes; frictional contact model; hybrid multiresolution wires; kinematic constraint representation; lumped element resolution; massless frictional contacts; massless quasistatic representations; stick friction; wires visual interactive simulation; Adaptation model; Computational modeling; Geometry; Numerical models; Visualization; Wires; Computer graphics; adaptive resolution; animation; dry frictional contacts.; graphics and realism; physics simulation; strands; three-dimensional; virtual reality; wires;
Journal_Title :
Visualization and Computer Graphics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TVCG.2010.122