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Level set methods: An overview and some recent results (2001)

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by Stanley Osher , Ronald P. Fedkiw
Venue:J. Comput. Phys
Citations:226 - 11 self
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BibTeX

@ARTICLE{Osher01levelset,
    author = {Stanley Osher and Ronald P. Fedkiw},
    title = {Level set methods: An overview and some recent results},
    journal = {J. Comput. Phys},
    year = {2001},
    volume = {169},
    pages = {463--502}
}

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Abstract

The level set method was devised by Osher and Sethian in [64] as a simple and versatile method for computing and analyzing the motion of an interface Γ in two or three dimensions. Γ bounds a (possibly multiply connected) region Ω. The goal is to compute and analyze the subsequent motion of Γ under a velocity field �v. This velocity can depend on position, time, the geometry of the interface and the external physics. The interface is captured for later time as the zero level set of a smooth (at least Lipschitz continuous) function ϕ(�x,t), i.e., Γ(t)={�x|ϕ(�x,t)=0}. ϕ is positive inside Ω, negative outside Ω andiszeroonΓ(t). Topological merging and breaking are well defined and easily performed. In this review article we discuss recent variants and extensions, including the motion of curves in three dimensions, the Dynamic Surface Extension method, fast methods for steady state problems, diffusion generated motion and the variational level set approach. We also give a user’s guide to the level set dictionary and technology, couple the method to a wide variety of problems involving external physics, such as compressible and incompressible (possibly reacting) flow, Stefan problems, kinetic crystal growth, epitaxial growth of thin films,

Keyphrases

recent result    external physic    versatile method    variational level    wide variety    recent variant    dynamic surface extension method    subsequent motion    level set    kinetic crystal growth    thin film    negative outside andiszeroon    user guide    steady state problem    epitaxial growth    stefan problem    topological merging    review article    velocity field   

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