Laboratory experiment on a opening fracture with the M3C2 distance Plugin
Posted: Wed May 11, 2016 5:23 pm
Hi all,
I'm using the M3C2 algorithm in order to realize a laboratory experiment in which I want to simulate an opening fracture between two rocks. I have got four different aligned point clouds of the two rocks representing four different steps. In every step I have increased the fracture of 1 cm moving only one rock. In the M3C2 plugin I have used the first step as the reference cloud upon which I have compared the others clouds. Is it right to project the M3C2 distances on the reference cloud to evaluate the displacement between the two rocks in two different steps? Then, I analyzed the gaussian distribution of every comparison between two clouds and I have seen that the negative values are distributed on the stable rock and the positive values on the moving rock and in the fracture. In your opinion is it correct to interpretate the positive part of the gaussian distribution as the forced displacement in the second rock and in the fracture? Thank you very much indeed for your help.
Best regards
Sara
I'm using the M3C2 algorithm in order to realize a laboratory experiment in which I want to simulate an opening fracture between two rocks. I have got four different aligned point clouds of the two rocks representing four different steps. In every step I have increased the fracture of 1 cm moving only one rock. In the M3C2 plugin I have used the first step as the reference cloud upon which I have compared the others clouds. Is it right to project the M3C2 distances on the reference cloud to evaluate the displacement between the two rocks in two different steps? Then, I analyzed the gaussian distribution of every comparison between two clouds and I have seen that the negative values are distributed on the stable rock and the positive values on the moving rock and in the fracture. In your opinion is it correct to interpretate the positive part of the gaussian distribution as the forced displacement in the second rock and in the fracture? Thank you very much indeed for your help.
Best regards
Sara