AbstractsEarth & Environmental Science

Erosion, Self-Organization, and Procedural Modeling

by Alexei Pytel




Institution: University of Waterloo
Department:
Year: 2015
Keywords: procedural modeling; terrain modeling; hydraulic erosion
Record ID: 2061542
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10012/9085


Abstract

Procedural modeling of natural objects such as coastlines and terrains in combination with their characteristic erosion features involves integration of appropriate physical models with the procedural approach and culminates in the development of physically-based simulations. I have invented a modeling paradigm for designing this type of simulations in a way that generalizes formation of complex relationships between erosion features, such as the tributary relationship. My generalization uses self-organization to define where erosion occurs and how it propagates rather than emphasizing the exact mechanism of erosion and the details of what happens during each erosion event. Propagation of state changes due to self-organization can also lead to emergence of fractal character, which is essential for modeling of natural objects, without explicit fractal synthesis. I successfully apply my methodology to procedural modeling of dunes, coastlines, terrains that undergo hydraulic erosion due to channel networks, and 3D channel networks that form underground.