Mathieu Desbrun brings objects to life

Accolade/Award Research
On  March 17, 2021
Having recently joined the Inria centre in Saclay, Mathieu Desbrun, a graduate of Grenoble INP - Ensimag, has been recognised by the Association for Computing Machinery for his contribution to computer science.
When watching a Pixar animation, we have all wondered how the princess’s hair or a creature’s fur came to be so realistically animated. In fact, years of research in computer graphics lie behind this feat, and many mathematical models are used to animate these types of objects in the most natural way possible. This is precisely the job of Mathieu Desbrun, a teacher-researcher in applied geometry at Inria and a 1994 graduate of Grenoble INP - Ensimag.

As a young engineer, Desbrun was passionate about computers and fascinated by fractal images: mathematical objects with effects that are often considered hypnotic, and very quickly turned to 3D computer graphics. After obtaining his degree, he began a thesis with Marie-Paule Cani on highly deformable objects at the former iMAGIS laboratory in Grenoble, followed by a post-doctorate at Caltech in the USA. He remained there for 23 years as a professor in applied geometry, a term he himself coined to emphasise the importance of applications in his research.
 
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Cinema, vehicles... and many other fields

 

What is the purpose of his research? “To describe and animate virtual objects in time according to their environment,” he summarises. “There is a whole market that needs to render realistic animations with the least amount of computing time. For a film, we need to produce 60 images per second, for 1 hour 30 minutes!” The art of the computer scientist is to find a way to make these calculations as quickly as possible to generate the objects, animate them and obtain a natural visual rendering. To do this, Mathieu Desbrun relies on discrete differential geometry, which allows him to numerically reproduce the fundamental equations that model the world around us.

Beyond film, this research is useful in many other areas. “For example, we can provide tools for car designers to test the influence of a car's shape on its aerodynamics in real time,” explains the researcher. “Or to simulate the influence of helicopter blade design on noise and lift in real time. Or to model certain organs of the human body and the blood system.” Back in France, Mathieu Desbrun - on indefinite leave from Caltech - has just joined the Inria Saclay - Île-de-France centre as an advanced researcher, and the LIX (École Polytechnique's computer science laboratory) as a teacher.


Copyright images : Pixar
Published on  March 17, 2021
Updated on  March 17, 2021