Transfinite interpolation

From HandWiki

In numerical analysis, transfinite interpolation is a means to construct functions over a planar domain in such a way that they match a given function on the boundary. This method is applied in geometric modelling and in the field of finite element method.[1] The transfinite interpolation method, first introduced by William J. Gordon and Charles A. Hall,[2] receives its name due to how a function belonging to this class is able to match the primitive function at a nondenumerable number of points.[3] In the authors' words:

Transfinite interpolation is similar to the Coons patch, invented in 1967. [4]


Formula

With parametrized curves c1(u), c3(u) describing one pair of opposite sides of a domain, and c2(v), c4(v) describing the other pair. the position of point (u,v) in the domain is

S(u,v)=(1v)c1(u)+vc3(u)+(1u)c2(v)+uc4(v)[(1u)(1v)P1,2+uvP3,4+u(1v)P1,4+(1u)vP3,2]

where, e.g., P1,2 is the point where curves c1 and c2 meet.

References

  1. Dyken, Christopher; Floater, Michael S. (2009). "Transfinite mean value interpolation". Computer Aided Geometric Design 1 (26): 117–134. doi:10.1016/j.cagd.2007.12.003. 
  2. Gordon, William; Hall, Charles (1973). "Construction of curvilinear coordinate systems and application to mesh generation". International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 7 (4): 461–477. doi:10.1002/nme.1620070405. 
  3. Gordon, William; Thiel, Linda (1982). "Transfinite mapping and their application to grid generation". Applied Mathematics and Computation 10–11 (10): 171–233. doi:10.1016/0096-3003(82)90191-6. 
  4. Steven A. Coons, Surfaces for computer-aided design of space forms, Technical Report MAC-TR-41, Project MAC, MIT, June 1967.