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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Molecular shape analysis based upon the morse-smale complex and the connolly function
Frédéric ChazalThomas LewinerFrédéric Cazalssubject
Maxima and minimasymbols.namesakePure mathematicsEuler's formulasymbolsSolid angleDiscrete Morse theoryVector fieldPolygon meshGeometryTime complexityMorse theoryMathematicsdescription
Docking is the process by which two or several molecules form a complex. Docking involves the geometry of the molecular surfaces, as well as chemical and energetical considerations. In the mid-eighties, Connolly proposed a docking algorithm matching surface knobs with surface depressions. Knobs and depressions refer to the extrema of the Connolly function, which is defined as follows. Given a surface M bounding a three-dimensional domain X, and a sphere S centered at a point p of M, the Connolly function is equal to the solid angle of the portion of S containing within X.We recast the notions of knobs and depressions in the framework of Morse theory for functions defined over two-dimensional manifolds. First, we study the critical points of the Connolly function for smooth surfaces. Second, we provide an efficient algorithm for computing the Connolly function over a triangulated surface. Third, we introduce a Morse-Smale decomposition based on Forman's discrete Morse theory, and provide an O(n log n) algorithm to construct it. This decomposition induces a partition of the surface into regions of homogeneous flow, and provides an elegant way to relate local quantities to global ones--from critical points to Euler's characteristic of the surface. Fourth, we apply this Morse-Smale decomposition to the discrete gradient vector field induced by Connolly's function, and present experimental results for several mesh models.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-06-08 | Proceedings of the nineteenth annual symposium on Computational geometry |