Fitting to image by piecewise bi-cubic surface

Author(s):  
Xue-Mei Li ◽  
Cai-Ming Zhang ◽  
Yi-Zhen Yue
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
W. L. Edge

SynopsisThe cubic surfaces in, save for the elliptic cone, are, whatever their singularities, projections of del Pezzo's non-singular surface F, of order 9 in. It is explained how, merely by specifying the geometrical relation of the vertex of projection to F, each cubic surface is obtainable “at a stroke”, without using spaces of intermediate dimensions.


1869 ◽  
Vol 159 ◽  
pp. 231-326 ◽  

The present Memoir is based upon, and is in a measure supplementary to that by Pro­fessor Schläfli, “On the Distribution of Surfaces of the Third Order into Species, in reference to the presence or absence of Singular Points, and the reality of their Lines,” Phil. Trans, vol. cliii. (1863) pp. 193—241. But the object of the Memoir is different. I disregard altogether the ultimate division depending on the reality of the lines, attend­ing only to the division into (twenty-two, or as I prefer to reckon it) twenty-three cases depending on the nature of the singularities. And I attend to the question very much on account of the light to be obtained in reference to the theory of Reciprocal Surfaces. The memoir referred to furnishes in fact a store of materials for this purpose, inasmuch as it gives (partially or completely developed) the equations in plane-coordinates of the several cases of cubic surfaces, or, what is the same thing, the equations in point-coor­dinates of the several surfaces (orders 12 to 3) reciprocal to these repectively. I found by examination of the several cases, that an extension was required of Dr. Salmon’s theory of Reciprocal Surfaces in order to make it applicable to the present subject ; and the preceding “Memoir on the Theory of Reciprocal Surfaces” was written in connexion with these investigations on Cubic Surfaces. The latter part of the Memoir is divided into sections headed thus:— “Section I = 12, equation (X, Y, Z, W ) 3 = 0” &c. referring to the several cases of the cubic surface; but the paragraphs are numbered continuously through the Memoir. The twenty-three Cases of Cubic Surfaces—Explanations and Table of Singularities . Article Nos. 1 to 13. 1. I designate as follows the twenty-three cases of cubic surfaces, adding to each of them its equation:


1990 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 2039-2061 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvatore Giuffrida ◽  
Renato Maggioni
Keyword(s):  

1927 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. W. Richmond

In comparison with the general plane quartic on the one hand, and the curves having either two or three nodes on the other, the uninodal curve has been neglected. Many of its properties may of course be deduced from those of the general quartic in the limiting case when an oval shrinks to a point or when two branches approach and ultimately unite. The modifications of properties of the bitangents are shewn more clearly by Geiser's method, in which these lines are obtained by projecting the lines of a cubic surface from a point on the surface. As the point moves up to and crosses a line on the surface, the quartic acquires a node and certain pairs of bitangents obviously coincide, viz. those obtained by projecting two lines coplanar with that on which the point lies. A nodal quartic curve and its double tangents may also be obtained by projecting a cubic surface which has a conical point from an arbitrary point on the surface. Each of these three methods leads us to the conclusion that, when a quartic acquires a node, twelve of the double tangents coincide two and two and become six tangents from the node, and the other sixteen remain as genuine bitangents: the twelve which coincide are six pairs of a Steiner complex.


1997 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-97
Author(s):  
R. H. Dye

A general space curve has only a finite number of quadrisecants, and it is rare for these to be bitangents. We show that there are irreducible rational space sextics whose six quadrisecants are all bitangents. All such sextics are projectively equivalent, and they lie by pairs on diagonal cubic surfaces. The bitangents of such a related pair are the halves of the distinguished double-six of the diagonal cubic surface. No space sextic curve has more than six bitangents, and the only other types with six bitangents are certain (4,2) curves on quadrics. In the course of the argument we see that space sextics with at least six quadrisecants are either (4,2) or (5,1) quadric curves with infinitely many, or are curves which each lie on a unique, and non-singular, cubic surface and have one half of a double-six for quadrisecants.


2001 ◽  
Vol 235 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy C McCune
Keyword(s):  

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