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trajectdelen

Trajectdelen, in Dutch, refer to the constituent parts or segments of a trajectory—the path traced by a moving object through space (and often time). The term is used in fields such as robotics, biomechanics, traffic and air navigation, computer animation, and signal processing to describe how a full trajectory can be decomposed into smaller, more manageable pieces.

Formally, if a trajectory is a map gamma from a time interval [t0, tf] to a state

The segmentation serves several purposes. It enables modular planning and control, allows analysis of different motion

Segmentation criteria vary and may be time-based, distance-based, or event-driven, depending on constraints such as continuity

space,
a
trajectdeel
is
obtained
by
choosing
a
partition
of
the
interval:
0
=
t0
<
t1
<
...
<
tn
=
tf.
Each
trajectdeel
is
the
restriction
gamma|[ti-1,
ti],
representing
the
path
of
the
object
during
that
sub-interval.
Trajectdelen
can
be
described
by
simple
models,
such
as
linear
or
polynomial
interpolations,
or
by
more
complex
parametric
forms.
In
practice,
a
trajectory
may
be
explicitly
piecewise-defined,
with
distinct
dynamics
or
control
laws
governing
each
segment.
primitives,
and
supports
estimation
and
optimization
by
reducing
a
complex
path
to
simpler
units.
In
robotics,
trajectdelen
may
correspond
to
distinct
motion
primitives
or
waypoints;
in
biomechanics,
they
can
align
with
phases
of
a
gait
cycle;
in
transportation,
segments
often
run
between
waypoints
or
control
regions.
of
position,
velocity,
or
acceleration.
The
choice
of
segment
length
and
number
affects
computational
efficiency
and
the
smoothness
of
the
resulting
trajectory.
See
also
trajectory
planning
and
trajectory
optimization.