Graziano Gentili

2papers

2 Papers

NAApr 24, 2016
A comprehensive characterization of the set of polynomial curves with rational rotation-minimizing frames

Rida T. Farouki, Graziano Gentili, Carlotta Giannelli et al.

A rotation-minimizing frame $({\bf f}_1,{\bf f}_2,{\bf f}_3)$ on a space curve ${\bf r}(ξ)$ defines an orthonormal basis for $\mathbb{R}^3$ in which ${\bf f}_1={\bf r}'/|{\bf r}'|$ is the curve tangent, and the normal-plane vectors ${\bf f}_2$, ${\bf f}_3$ exhibit no instantaneous rotation about ${\bf f}_1$. Polynomial curves that admit rational rotation-minimizing frames (or RRMF curves) form a subset of the Pythagorean-hodograph (PH) curves, specified by integrating the form ${\bf r}'(ξ)={\cal A}(ξ)\,{\bf i}\,{\cal A}^*(ξ)$ for some quaternion polynomial ${\cal A}(ξ)$. By introducing the notion of rotation indicatrix and of core of the quaternion polynomial ${\cal A}(ξ)$, a comprehensive characterization of the complete space of RRMF curves is developed, that subsumes all previously known special cases. This novel characterization helps clarify the structure of the complete space of RRMF curves, distinguishes the spatial RRMF curves from trivial (planar) cases, and paves the way toward new construction algorithms.

CVJun 18, 2015
Solution of a quadratic quaternion equation with mixed coefficients

Rida T. Farouki, Graziano Gentili, Carlotta Giannelli et al.

A comprehensive analysis of the morphology of the solution space for a special type of quadratic quaternion equation is presented. This equation, which arises in a surface construction problem, incorporates linear terms in a quaternion variable and its conjugate with right and left quaternion coefficients, while the quadratic term has a quaternion coefficient placed between the variable and its conjugate. It is proved that, for generic coefficients, the equation has two, one, or no solutions, but in certain special instances the solution set may comprise a circle or a 3-sphere in the quaternion space $\mathbb{H}$. The analysis yields solutions for each case, and intuitive interpretations of them in terms of the four-dimensional geometry of the quaternion space $\mathbb{H}$.