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{{short description|Surface formed from spheres centered along a curve}}
[[Image:Torus and focal line.png|thumb|right|300px|A section of a [[torus]], a special case of a [[cyclide]]. The black lines are the two sheets of the focal surface, which here both degenerate to curves. The surface can be generated as envelopes of spheres centered on these lines.]]
[[File:Canal-helix-s.svg|400px|thumb|canal surface: directrix is a [[helix]], with its generating spheres]]
A '''channel''' or '''canal surface''' is a [[surface]] formed as the [[envelope (mathematics)|envelope]] of a family of [[sphere]]s whose centers lie on a [[space curve]]. One sheet of the [[focal surface]] of a channel surface will be the generating curve.
[[File:Pipe-helix-spheres-s.svg|400px|thumb|pipe surface: directrix is a helix, with generating spheres]]
[[File:Pipe-helix-s.svg|300px|thumb|pipe surface: directrix is a helix]]


In [[geometry]] and [[topology]], a '''channel''' or '''canal surface''' is a surface formed as the [[Envelope (mathematics)|envelope]] of a family of [[sphere]]s whose centers lie on a space [[curve]], its ''[[Generatrix|directrix]]''. If the radii of the generating spheres are constant, the canal surface is called a '''pipe surface'''. Simple examples are:
If the sphere centers lie on a straight line, the channel surface is a [[surface of revolution]]. [[Dupin cyclide]]s form a special class of surfaces which are channel surfaces in two distinct ways: for cyclides both sheets of the [[focal surface]] are curves; in fact they are both [[conic section]]s.


* [[right circular cylinder]] (pipe surface, directrix is a line, the axis of the cylinder)
==References==
* [[torus]] (pipe surface, directrix is a circle),
* [[right circular cone]] (canal surface, directrix is a line (the axis), radii of the spheres not constant),
* [[surface of revolution]] (canal surface, directrix is a line),

Canal surfaces play an essential role in descriptive geometry, because in case of an [[orthographic projection]] its contour curve can be drawn as the envelope of circles.
*In technical area canal surfaces can be used for ''blending surfaces'' smoothly.

== Envelope of a pencil of implicit surfaces ==
Given the pencil of [[implicit surface]]s
:<math>\Phi_c: f({\mathbf x},c)=0 , c\in [c_1,c_2]</math>,
two neighboring surfaces <math>\Phi_c</math> and
<math>\Phi_{c+\Delta c}</math> intersect in a curve that fulfills the equations
:<math> f({\mathbf x},c)=0</math> and <math>f({\mathbf x},c+\Delta c)=0</math>.

For the limit <math>\Delta c \to 0</math> one gets
<math>f_c({\mathbf x},c)= \lim_{\Delta c \to \ 0} \frac{f({\mathbf x},c)-f({\mathbf x},c+\Delta c)}{\Delta c}=0</math>.
The last equation is the reason for the following definition.
* Let <math>\Phi_c: f({\mathbf x},c)=0 , c\in [c_1,c_2]</math> be a 1-parameter pencil of regular implicit <math>C^2</math> surfaces (<math>f</math> being at least twice continuously differentiable). The surface defined by the two equations
*:<math> f({\mathbf x},c)=0, \quad f_c({\mathbf x},c)=0 </math>
is the '''envelope''' of the given pencil of surfaces.<ref>[http://www.mathematik.tu-darmstadt.de/~ehartmann/cdgen0104.pdf ''Geometry and Algorithms for COMPUTER AIDED DESIGN''], p. 115</ref>

== Canal surface ==
Let <math>\Gamma: {\mathbf x}={\mathbf c}(u)=(a(u),b(u),c(u))^\top</math> be a regular space curve and <math>r(t)</math> a <math>C^1</math>-function with <math>r>0</math> and <math>|\dot{r}|<\|\dot{\mathbf c}\|</math>. The last condition means that the curvature of the curve is less than that of the corresponding sphere.
The envelope of the 1-parameter pencil of spheres
:<math>f({\mathbf x};u):= \big\|{\mathbf x}-{\mathbf c}(u)\big\|^2-r^2(u)=0</math>
is called a '''canal surface''' and <math>\Gamma</math> its '''directrix'''. If the radii are constant, it is called a '''pipe surface'''.

== Parametric representation of a canal surface ==
The envelope condition
:<math>f_u({\mathbf x},u)=
2\Big(-\big({\mathbf x}-{\mathbf c}(u)\big)^\top\dot{\mathbf c}(u)-r(u)\dot{r}(u)\Big)=0</math>
of the canal surface above is for any value of <math>u</math> the equation of a plane, which is orthogonal to the tangent
<math>\dot{\mathbf c}(u)</math> of the directrix. Hence the envelope is a collection of circles.
This property is the key for a parametric representation of the canal surface. The center of the circle (for parameter <math>u</math>) has the distance
<math>d:=\frac{r\dot{r}}{\|\dot{\mathbf c}\|}<r</math> (see condition above)
from the center of the corresponding sphere and its radius is <math>\sqrt{r^2-d^2}</math>. Hence
:*<math>{\mathbf x}={\mathbf x}(u,v):=
{\mathbf c}(u)-\frac{r(u)\dot{r}(u)}{\|\dot{\mathbf c}(u)\|^2}\dot{\mathbf c}(u)
+r(u)\sqrt{1-\frac{\dot{r}(u)^2}{\|\dot{\mathbf c}(u)\|^2}}
\big({\mathbf e}_1(u)\cos(v)+ {\mathbf e}_2(u)\sin(v)\big),</math>
where the vectors <math>{\mathbf e}_1,{\mathbf e}_2</math> and the tangent vector <math>\dot{\mathbf c}/\|\dot{\mathbf c}\|</math> form an orthonormal basis, is a parametric representation of the canal surface.<ref>[http://www.mathematik.tu-darmstadt.de/~ehartmann/cdgen0104.pdf ''Geometry and Algorithms for COMPUTER AIDED DESIGN''], p. 117</ref>

For <math>\dot{r}=0</math> one gets the parametric representation of a '''pipe''' surface:
:* <math>{\mathbf x}={\mathbf x}(u,v):=
{\mathbf c}(u)+r\big({\mathbf e}_1(u)\cos(v)+ {\mathbf e}_2(u)\sin(v)\big).</math>

[[File:Pipe-knot-s.svg|300px|thumb|pipe knot]]
[[File:Cyclid-s.svg|300px|thumb|canal surface: Dupin cyclide]]

== Examples ==
:a) The first picture shows a canal surface with
:#the helix <math>(\cos(u),\sin(u), 0.25u), u\in[0,4]</math> as directrix and
:#the radius function <math>r(u):= 0.2+0.8u/2\pi</math>.
:#The choice for <math>{\mathbf e}_1,{\mathbf e}_2</math> is the following:
::<math>{\mathbf e}_1:=(\dot{b},-\dot{a},0)/\|\cdots\|,\
{\mathbf e}_2:= ({\mathbf e}_1\times \dot{\mathbf c})/\|\cdots\|</math>.
:b) For the second picture the radius is constant:<math>r(u):= 0.2</math>, i. e. the canal surface is a pipe surface.
:c) For the 3. picture the pipe surface b) has parameter <math>u\in[0,7.5]</math>.
:d) The 4. picture shows a pipe knot. Its directrix is a curve on a torus
:e) The 5. picture shows a [[Dupin cyclide]] (canal surface).

== References ==
{{Reflist}}
*{{cite book
*{{cite book
| author = [[David Hilbert|Hilbert, David]]; Cohn-Vossen, Stephan
|author1= Hilbert, David
|author-link= David Hilbert
| title = Geometry and the Imagination
|author2=Cohn-Vossen, Stephan
| edition = 2nd ed.
| title = Geometry and the Imagination
|url= https://archive.org/details/geometryimaginat00davi_0|url-access= registration| edition = 2nd
| year = 1952
| year = 1952
| publisher = Chelsea
| publisher = Chelsea
| page = [https://archive.org/details/geometryimaginat00davi_0/page/219 219]
| page = 219
| isbn = 0-8284-1087-9}}
| isbn = 0-8284-1087-9}}


== External links ==
[[Category:Surfaces]]
*[http://www.dmg.tuwien.ac.at/peternell/canalsurf.pdf M. Peternell and H. Pottmann: ''Computing Rational Parametrizations of Canal Surfaces'']


[[Category:Surfaces]]

{{geometry-stub}}

Latest revision as of 06:58, 4 June 2022

canal surface: directrix is a helix, with its generating spheres
pipe surface: directrix is a helix, with generating spheres
pipe surface: directrix is a helix

In geometry and topology, a channel or canal surface is a surface formed as the envelope of a family of spheres whose centers lie on a space curve, its directrix. If the radii of the generating spheres are constant, the canal surface is called a pipe surface. Simple examples are:

Canal surfaces play an essential role in descriptive geometry, because in case of an orthographic projection its contour curve can be drawn as the envelope of circles.

  • In technical area canal surfaces can be used for blending surfaces smoothly.

Envelope of a pencil of implicit surfaces

[edit]

Given the pencil of implicit surfaces

,

two neighboring surfaces and intersect in a curve that fulfills the equations

and .

For the limit one gets . The last equation is the reason for the following definition.

  • Let be a 1-parameter pencil of regular implicit surfaces ( being at least twice continuously differentiable). The surface defined by the two equations

is the envelope of the given pencil of surfaces.[1]

Canal surface

[edit]

Let be a regular space curve and a -function with and . The last condition means that the curvature of the curve is less than that of the corresponding sphere. The envelope of the 1-parameter pencil of spheres

is called a canal surface and its directrix. If the radii are constant, it is called a pipe surface.

Parametric representation of a canal surface

[edit]

The envelope condition

of the canal surface above is for any value of the equation of a plane, which is orthogonal to the tangent of the directrix. Hence the envelope is a collection of circles. This property is the key for a parametric representation of the canal surface. The center of the circle (for parameter ) has the distance (see condition above) from the center of the corresponding sphere and its radius is . Hence

where the vectors and the tangent vector form an orthonormal basis, is a parametric representation of the canal surface.[2]

For one gets the parametric representation of a pipe surface:

pipe knot
canal surface: Dupin cyclide

Examples

[edit]
a) The first picture shows a canal surface with
  1. the helix as directrix and
  2. the radius function .
  3. The choice for is the following:
.
b) For the second picture the radius is constant:, i. e. the canal surface is a pipe surface.
c) For the 3. picture the pipe surface b) has parameter .
d) The 4. picture shows a pipe knot. Its directrix is a curve on a torus
e) The 5. picture shows a Dupin cyclide (canal surface).

References

[edit]
  • Hilbert, David; Cohn-Vossen, Stephan (1952). Geometry and the Imagination (2nd ed.). Chelsea. p. 219. ISBN 0-8284-1087-9.
[edit]