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  2. Polygon mesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygon_mesh

    in which each edge points to two vertices, two faces, and the four (clockwise and counterclockwise) edges that touch them. Winged-edge meshes allow constant time traversal of the surface, but with higher storage requirements. Half-edge meshes Similar to winged-edge meshes except that only half the edge traversal information is used. (see OpenMesh)

  3. Polygonal modeling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygonal_modeling

    The subdivide tool splits faces and edges into smaller pieces by adding new vertices. For example, a square would be subdivided by adding one vertex in the center and one on each edge, creating four smaller squares. The extrude tool is applied to a face or a group of faces. It creates a new face of the same size and shape which is connected to ...

  4. Menger sponge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menger_sponge

    Menger showed, in the 1926 construction, that the sponge is a universal curve, in that every curve is homeomorphic to a subset of the Menger sponge, where a curve means any compact metric space of Lebesgue covering dimension one; this includes trees and graphs with an arbitrary countable number of edges, vertices and closed loops, connected in ...

  5. List of centroids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_centroids

    h = the height of the semi-ellipsoid from the base cicle's center to the edge Solid paraboloid of revolution around z-axis: a = the radius of the base circle h = the height of the paboloid from the base cicle's center to the edge

  6. Delaunay triangulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaunay_triangulation

    As mentioned above, if a triangle is non-Delaunay, we can flip one of its edges. This leads to a straightforward algorithm: construct any triangulation of the points, and then flip edges until no triangle is non-Delaunay. Unfortunately, this can take Ω(n 2) edge flips. [10]

  7. Solid angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_angle

    Diagram showing a section through the centre of a cone (1) subtending a solid angle of 1 steradian in a sphere of radius r, along with the spherical "cap" (2). The external surface area A of the cap equals r2 only if solid angle of the cone is exactly 1 steradian. Hence, in this figure θ = A/2 and r = 1.

  8. Geometrical-optical illusions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometrical-optical_illusions

    Mach bands = visual illusion of brightness (intensive property) Illusions of position (Poggendorff), orientation (Zöllner) and, below, length (Müller-Lyer) Hering Illusion of curvature Delboeuf Illusion of size: left inner circle and right outer circle are actually equal Vertical–horizontal illusion Shifted-chessboard illusion

  9. Centre (geometry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_(geometry)

    f is symmetric in its last two arguments; i.e., f(a,b,c)= f(a,c,b); thus position of a centre in a mirror-image triangle is the mirror-image of its position in the original triangle. [ 1 ] This strict definition excludes pairs of bicentric points such as the Brocard points (which are interchanged by a mirror-image reflection).