Stanford Bunny

Source Notebook

3D model of the Stanford Bunny

Originator: Greg Turk and Marc Levoy

Details

Computer graphics 3D test model developed by Greg Turk and Marc Levoy in 1994 at Stanford University. The bunny consists of data describing 69,451 triangles determined by 3D scanning a ceramic figurine of a rabbit. This model and others were scanned to test methods of range scanning physical objects. (Wikipedia)
Additional content elements include:
“Description"description
“LongDescription"long description
“Name"English name
StandardName"standard English name
"MeshRegion"mesh region representation
"Region"region representation
"PolygonCount"number of polygons
"VertexCount"number of vertices
"ConnectedComponents"number of connected components
"BoundingBox"bounding box
"Summary"summary information

Examples

Basic Examples (2) 

Retrieve the model:

In[1]:=
ResourceData[\!\(\*
TagBox["\"\<Stanford Bunny\>\"",
#& ,
BoxID -> "ResourceTag-Stanford Bunny-Input",
AutoDelete->True]\)]
Out[1]=

Summary properties:

In[2]:=
ResourceData[\!\(\*
TagBox["\"\<Stanford Bunny\>\"",
#& ,
BoxID -> "ResourceTag-Stanford Bunny-Input",
AutoDelete->True]\), "Summary"]
Out[2]=

Scope & Additional Elements (1) 

Find the minimum volume ball that encapsulates the mesh:

In[3]:=
bound = BoundingRegion[ResourceData[\!\(\*
TagBox["\"\<Stanford Bunny\>\"",
#& ,
BoxID -> "ResourceTag-Stanford Bunny-Input",
AutoDelete->True]\)], "MinBall"]
Out[3]=
In[4]:=
Show[{ResourceData[\!\(\*
TagBox["\"\<Stanford Bunny\>\"",
#& ,
BoxID -> "ResourceTag-Stanford Bunny-Input",
AutoDelete->True]\)], Graphics3D[{Opacity[0.5], bound}]}]
Out[4]=

Wolfram Research, "Stanford Bunny" from the Wolfram Data Repository (2022)   https://doi.org/10.24097/wolfram.91305.data

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