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In this work, we model the movement of a figure skater gliding on ice by the Chaplygin sleigh, a classic pedagogical example of a nonholonomic mechanical system. The Chaplygin sleigh is controlled by a movable added mass, modeling the movable center of mass of the figure skater. The position and velocity of the added mass act as controls that can be used to steer the skater in order to produce prescribed patterns. For any piecewise smooth prescribed curve, this model can be used to determine the controls needed to reproduce that curve by approximating the curve with circular arcs. Tracing of the circular arcs is exact in our control procedure, so the accuracy of the method depends solely on the accuracy of approximation of a trajectory by circular arcs. To reproduce the individual elements of a pattern, we employ an optimization algorithm. We conclude by reproducing a classical double flower figure skating pattern and compute the resulting controls.
We derive and analyze a three dimensional model of a figure skater. We model the skater as a three-dimensional body moving in space subject to a non-holonomic constraint enforcing movement along the skates direction and holonomic constraints of conti
This paper targets at learning to score the figure skating sports videos. To address this task, we propose a deep architecture that includes two complementary components, i.e., Self-Attentive LSTM and Multi-scale Convolutional Skip LSTM. These two co
Highlight detection in sports videos has a broad viewership and huge commercial potential. It is thus imperative to detect highlight scenes more suitably for human interest with high temporal accuracy. Since people instinctively suppress blinks durin
Traffic anomaly detection has played a crucial role in Intelligent Transportation System (ITS). The main challenges of this task lie in the highly diversified anomaly scenes and variational lighting conditions. Although much work has managed to ident
The friction of a stationary moving skate on smooth ice is investigated, in particular in relation to the formation of a thin layer of water between skate and ice. It is found that the combination of ploughing and sliding gives a friction force that