11,183 research outputs found

    Divergence-Free and Boundary-Respecting Velocity Interpolation Using Stream Functions

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    In grid-based fluid simulation, discrete incompressibility of each cell is enforced by the pressure projection. However, pointwise velocities constructed by interpolating the discrete velocity samples from the staggered grid are not truly divergence-free, resulting in unphysical local volume changes that manifests as particle spreading and clustering.We present a new velocity interpolation method that produces analytically divergence-free velocity fields in 2D using a stream function. The resulting fields are guaranteed to be divergence-free by a simple calculus identity: the curl of any vector field yields a divergence-free vector field. Furthermore, our method works on cut cell grids to produce fields that strictly obey solid boundary conditions. Therefore, no artificial gaps are created between fluid particles and solids, and fluid particles do not trespass into solid regions.Eurographics/ ACM SIGGRAPH Symposium on Computer AnimationPoster

    Interview with Nicholas Christopher, author of Somewhere in the Night: Film Noir and the American City

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    Interview with Nicholas Christopher, author of Somewhere in the Night: Film Noir and the American Cit

    A collection of hymns for the use of those that seek, [electronic resource] : and those that have redemption In the Blood of Christ.

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    Preface signed: I.A., C.B., &c. (i.e. James Allen, Christopher Batty, etc.).The two leaves following the titlepage form the preface, and are numbered 2 and 4 on the rectos and 3 on the first verso.Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from British Library

    Accurate viscous free surfaces for buckling, coiling, and rotating liquids

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    © Christopher Batty & Robert Bridson | ACM 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive Version of Record was published in SCA '08: Proceedings of the 2008 ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation, https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.5555/1632592.1632624?cid=81320487818.We present a fully implicit Eulerian technique for simulating free surface viscous liquids which eliminates artifacts in previous approaches, efficiently supports variable viscosity, and allows the simulation of more compelling viscous behaviour than previously achieved in graphics. Our method exploits a variational principle which automatically enforces the complex boundary condition on the shear stress at the free surface, while giving rise to a simple discretization with a symmetric positive definite linear system. We demonstrate examples of our technique capturing realistic buckling, folding and coiling behavior. In addition, we explain how to handle domains whose boundary comprises both ghost fluid Dirichlet and variational Neumann parts, allowing correct behaviour at free surfaces and solid walls for both our viscous solve and the variational pressure projection of Batty et al. [BBB07].This work was supported in part by a grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

    Matt Christopher Papers - Accession 1309

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    The collection includes letters written by the children’s book author, Matt Christopher, to his son, Marty Christopher. Many of the letters also contain newspaper articles of interest to Matt Christopher, which deal with local sports teams, his writing career, his participation in an exhibition baseball game against the New York Giants in 1938, and other of general interest. Most of the letters are personal in nature, however, a majority of the letters delve into Matt Christopher’s writing career, personal interests, the author’s health, as well as his family life.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2649/thumbnail.jp

    A simple finite volume method for adaptive viscous liquids

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    © Christopher Batty & Ben Houston | ACM 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive Version of Record was published in SCA '11: Proceedings of the 2011 ACM SIGGRAPH/Eurographics Symposium on Computer Animation, http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2019406.2019421We present the first spatially adaptive Eulerian fluid animation method to support challenging viscous liquid effects such as folding, coiling, and variable viscosity. We propose a tetrahedral node-based embedded finite volume method for fluid viscosity, adapted from popular techniques for Lagrangian deformable objects. Applied in an Eulerian fashion with implicit integration, this scheme stably and efficiently supports high viscosity fluids while yielding symmetric positive definite linear systems. To integrate this scheme into standard tetrahedral mesh-based fluid simulators, which store normal velocities on faces rather than velocity vectors at nodes, we offer two methods to reconcile these representations. The first incorporates a mapping between different degrees of freedom into the viscosity solve itself. The second uses a FLIP-like approach to transfer velocity data between nodes and faces before and after the linear solve. The former offers tighter coupling by enabling the linear solver to act directly on the face velocities of the staggered mesh, while the latter provides a sparser linear system and a simpler implementation. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with animations of spatially varying viscosity, realistic rotational motion, and viscous liquid buckling and coiling

    Matt Christopher Papers - Accession 1221

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    Matt Christopher (1917-1997) was a prolific author of children’s books having written over 100 books as well as over 300 short stories, articles, poems, and screenplays. Most of his writings dealt with sports themes, but he also wrote fantasy and mystery themed stories as well. The Matt Christopher Papers consist of both published and unpublished manuscripts, articles, and short stories. Also included are personal and business correspondence, biographical information, scrapbooks, photographs, and memorabilia.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1976/thumbnail.jp

    Differentiable Curl-Noise

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    © Xinwen Ding and Christopher Batty | ACM (2023). This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive Version of Record was published in Proceedings of the ACM on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3585511.We present Differentiable Curl-Noise, a C1 procedural method to animate strictly incompressible fluid flows in two dimensions. While both the original Curl-Noise method of Bridson et al. [2007] and a recent modification by Chang et al. [2022] have been used to design incompressible flow fields, they often suffer from non-smoothness in their handling of obstacles, owing in part to properties of the underlying Euclidean distance function or closest point function. We therefore propose a differentiable scheme that modulates the background potential in a manner that respects arbitrary solid simple polygonal objects placed at any location, without introducing discontinuities. We demonstrate that our new method yields improved flow fields in a set of two dimensional examples, including when obstacles are in close proximity or possess concavities.NSERC, Discovery Grant RGPIN-2021-02524

    Dr. Christopher von Rueden – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Christopher von Rueden, an anthropologist and Assistant Professor in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies, discusses a recent article entitled, “Men’s status and reproductive success in 33 non-industrial societies: Effects of subsistence, marriage system, and reproductive strategy,” which he co-authored with Dr. Adrian Jaeggi, an anthropologist at Emory University. Their findings were recently published in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

    Viscous Liquid Animation with Spatially Adaptive Grids

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    Viscous fluid behaviors are among the most complex yet familiar physical phenomena we encounter in everyday life. Much attention and investigation has been paid to the creation of visually realistic results, especially some unique effects such as folding and buckling, in computer graphics. However, simulation of viscous fluids requires more computational resources than its inviscid counterpart, since the viscous solve typically has lower sparsity and more degrees of freedom than the Poisson problem used to compute pressure forces. One interesting feature of viscous fluids is that the most important visual details happen at free surfaces of the fluid, while the interior flow remains relatively smooth. Therefore, a spatially adaptive grid with higher density of cells for fluid surfaces and lower density for the interior can be very useful in reducing computational resources and maintaining high-fidelity imagery at the same time. The focus of this thesis is to provide a method for simulating a highly viscous liquid on an adaptive quadtree grid, and generating visually plausible results. Aside from reviewing the techniques for viscous fluid simulation in computer graphics, we propose a new finite difference scheme to accurately compute the results at junctions where different levels of the quadtree are adjacent to each other. In addition, we apply the variational approach originally proposed by Batty and Bridson [2008] to this scheme, and generate a symmetric positive definite system on which a preconditioned conjugate gradient solver works very well. Thanks to the variational formulation, our method enforces the boundary condition at viscous free surfaces without the need of extra efforts. Lastly, this thesis presents a new scheme transferring velocities between an adaptive grid and a regular grid, which makes it easy to embed our viscosity solver into any grid-based inviscid fluid solver. We experimentally demonstrate that our method is first order accurate and achieves visual results that are qualitatively consistent with those of dense uniform grids, while reducing the number of degrees of freedom by a factor between 2 and 6, depending on the scenario
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