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Reshaping Convex Polyhedra 1st Edition Joseph Orourke Costin Vilcu

  • SKU: BELL-55922508
Reshaping Convex Polyhedra 1st Edition Joseph Orourke Costin Vilcu
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Reshaping Convex Polyhedra 1st Edition Joseph Orourke Costin Vilcu instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 29.96 MB
Pages: 526
Author: Joseph O'Rourke, Costin Vilcu
ISBN: 9783031475115, 9783031475108, 3031475119, 3031475100
Language: English
Year: 2024
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Reshaping Convex Polyhedra 1st Edition Joseph Orourke Costin Vilcu by Joseph O'rourke, Costin Vilcu 9783031475115, 9783031475108, 3031475119, 3031475100 instant download after payment.

The focus of this monograph is converting―reshaping―one 3D convex polyhedron to another via an operation the authors call “tailoring.” A convex polyhedron is a gem-like shape composed of flat facets, the focus of study since Plato and Euclid. The tailoring operation snips off a corner (a “vertex”) of a polyhedron and sutures closed the hole. This is akin to Johannes Kepler’s “vertex truncation,” but differs in that the hole left by a truncated vertex is filled with new surface, whereas tailoring zips the hole closed. A powerful “gluing” theorem of A.D. Alexandrov from 1950 guarantees that, after closing the hole, the result is a new convex polyhedron. Given two convex polyhedra P, and Q inside P, repeated tailoring allows P to be reshaped to Q. Rescaling any Q to fit inside P, the result is universal: any P can be reshaped to any Q. This is one of the main theorems in Part I, with unexpected theoretical consequences.
Part II carries out a systematic study of “vertex-merging,” a technique that can be viewed as a type of inverse operation to tailoring. Here the start is P which is gradually enlarged as much as possible, by inserting new surface along slits. In a sense, repeated vertex-merging reshapes P to be closer to planarity. One endpoint of such a process leads to P being cut up and “pasted” inside a cylinder. Then rolling the cylinder on a plane achieves an unfolding of P. The underlying subtext is a question posed by Geoffrey Shephard in 1975 and already implied by drawings by Albrecht Dürer in the 15th century: whether every convex polyhedron can be unfolded to a planar “net.” Toward this end, the authors initiate an exploration of convexity on convex polyhedra, a topic rarely studied in the literature but with considerable promise for future development.
This monograph uncovers new research directions and reveals connections among several, apparently distant, topics in geometry: Alexandrov’s Gluing Theorem, shortest paths and cut loci, Cauchy’s Arm Lemma,

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