Analysis of the Geometric Heat Flow Equation: Computing Geodesics in Real-Time with Convergence Guarantees
By: Samuel G. Gessow, Brett T. Lopez
Potential Business Impact:
Finds shortest paths on curved surfaces quickly.
We present an analysis on the convergence properties of the so-called geometric heat flow equation for computing geodesics (shortest-path~curves) on Riemannian manifolds. Computing geodesics numerically in real-time has become an important capability in several fields, including control and motion planning. The geometric heat flow equation involves solving a parabolic partial differential equation whose solution is a geodesic. In practice, solving this PDE numerically can be done efficiently, and tends to be more numerically stable and exhibit a better rate of convergence compared to numerical optimization. We prove that the geometric heat flow equation is globally exponentially stable in $L_2$ if the curvature of the Riemannian manifold is not too positive, and that asymptotic convergence in $L_2$ is always guaranteed. We also present a pseudospectral method that leverages Chebyshev polynomials to accurately compute geodesics in only a few milliseconds for non-contrived manifolds. Our analysis was verified with our custom pseudospectral method by computing geodesics on common non-Euclidean surfaces, and in feedback for a contraction-based controller with a non-flat metric for a nonlinear system.
Similar Papers
GEORCE: A Fast New Control Algorithm for Computing Geodesics
Differential Geometry
Finds shortest paths on complex shapes faster.
Discrete Geodesic Calculus in the Space of Sobolev Curves
Numerical Analysis
Helps computers measure how shapes change over time.
Error analysis for temporal second-order finite element approximations of axisymmetric mean curvature flow of genus-1 surfaces
Numerical Analysis
Makes shapes smooth and accurate faster.