10,521 research outputs found
Path-tracing Monte Carlo Library for 3D Radiative Transfer in Highly Resolved Cloudy Atmospheres
Interactions between clouds and radiation are at the root of many
difficulties in numerically predicting future weather and climate and in
retrieving the state of the atmosphere from remote sensing observations. The
large range of issues related to these interactions, and in particular to
three-dimensional interactions, motivated the development of accurate radiative
tools able to compute all types of radiative metrics, from monochromatic, local
and directional observables, to integrated energetic quantities. In the
continuity of this community effort, we propose here an open-source library for
general use in Monte Carlo algorithms. This library is devoted to the
acceleration of path-tracing in complex data, typically high-resolution
large-domain grounds and clouds. The main algorithmic advances embedded in the
library are those related to the construction and traversal of hierarchical
grids accelerating the tracing of paths through heterogeneous fields in
null-collision (maximum cross-section) algorithms. We show that with these
hierarchical grids, the computing time is only weakly sensitivive to the
refinement of the volumetric data. The library is tested with a rendering
algorithm that produces synthetic images of cloud radiances. Two other examples
are given as illustrations, that are respectively used to analyse the
transmission of solar radiation under a cloud together with its sensitivity to
an optical parameter, and to assess a parametrization of 3D radiative effects
of clouds.Comment: Submitted to JAMES, revised and submitted again (this is v2
VolumeEVM: A new surface/volume integrated model
Volume visualization is a very active research area in the field of scien-tific
visualization. The Extreme Vertices Model (EVM) has proven to be
a complete intermediate model to visualize and manipulate volume data
using a surface rendering approach. However, the ability to integrate the
advantages of surface rendering approach with the superiority in visual exploration
of the volume rendering would actually produce a very complete
visualization and edition system for volume data. Therefore, we decided
to define an enhanced EVM-based model which incorporates the volumetric
information required to achieved a nearly direct volume visualization
technique. Thus, VolumeEVM was designed maintaining the same EVM-based
data structure plus a sorted list of density values corresponding to
the EVM-based VoIs interior voxels. A function which relates interior
voxels of the EVM with the set of densities was mandatory to be defined.
This report presents the definition of this new surface/volume integrated
model based on the well known EVM encoding and propose implementations
of the main software-based direct volume rendering techniques
through the proposed model.Postprint (published version
Fast Reliable Ray-tracing of Procedurally Defined Implicit Surfaces Using Revised Affine Arithmetic
Fast and reliable rendering of implicit surfaces is an important area in the field of implicit modelling. Direct rendering, namely ray-tracing, is shown to be a suitable technique for obtaining good-quality visualisations of implicit surfaces. We present a technique for reliable ray-tracing of arbitrary procedurally defined implicit surfaces by using a modification of Affine Arithmetic called Revised Affine Arithmetic. A wide range of procedurally defined implicit objects can be rendered using this technique including polynomial surfaces, constructive solids, pseudo-random objects, procedurally defined microstructures, and others. We compare our technique with other reliable techniques based on Interval and Affine Arithmetic to show that our technique provides the fastest, while still reliable, ray-surface intersections and ray-tracing. We also suggest possible modifications for the GPU implementation of this technique for real-time rendering of relatively simple implicit models and for near real-time for complex implicit models
Time-Critical Volume Rendering
For the past twelve months, we have conducted and completed a joint research entitled "Time- Critical Volume Rendering" with NASA Ames. As expected, High performance volume rendering algorithms have been developed by exploring some new faster rendering techniques, including object presence acceleration, parallel processing, and hierarchical level-of-detail representation. Using our new techniques, initial experiments have achieved real-time rendering rates of more than 10 frames per second of various 3D data sets with highest resolution. A couple of joint papers and technique reports as well as an interactive real-time demo have been compiled as the result of this project
Topological Space Partition for Fast Ray Tracing in Architectural Models
International audienceFast ray-tracing requires an efficient acceleration structure. For architectural environment, the most famous is the cells-and-portals one. Many previous works attempt to automatically construct a good cells-and-portals. We propose a new acceleration structure which extends the classical cells-and-portals. It is automatically extracted from the topological model of a given building. It contains a low number of large volumes, all of them linked into a graph model. The scan of our structure is particularly simple and rapid, using all the topological information available from the topological model. The scan can be done for a single ray, or a wide ray packet. We show in this paper that our structure allows an interactive rendering even for large building models, with direct lighting from some thousands of point lights
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