J. Li, Thomas J. Peters, et al.
Applied General Topology
For applications in computing, Bézier curves are pervasive and are defined by a piecewise linear curve L which is embedded in R3 and yields a smooth polynomial curve C embedded in ℝ3. It is of interest to understand when L and C have the same embeddings. One class of counterexamples is shown for L being unknotted, while C is knotted. Another class of counterexamples is created where L is equilateral and simple, while C is self-intersecting. These counterexamples were discovered using curve visualizing software and numerical algorithms that produce general procedures to create more examples. © Universidad Politécnica de Valencia.
J. Li, Thomas J. Peters, et al.
Applied General Topology
J. Li, Thomas J. Peters, et al.
Topology and its Applications
Kirk E. Jordan, J. Li, et al.
Computer Aided Geometric Design
J. Li, Thomas J. Peters, et al.
Topology and its Applications