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Rick Measham wrote:
> Has anyone done such a surface before? I'd love it to REALLY be one-way
> so that I can see from the back, but no the front.
You're looking for a way to make a one-way mirror. From wikipedia:
"A one-way mirror, also called two-way mirror (!), reflects about half
of the light and lets the other half pass. It is a sheet of glass coated
with a layer of metal only a few dozen atoms thick, allowing some of the
light through the surface (from both sides). It is used between a dark
room and a brightly lit room. Persons on the brightly lit side see their
own reflection -- it looks like a normal mirror. Persons on the dark
side see through it -- it looks like a transparent window. It may be
used to observe criminal suspects or customers (to watch out for theft).
The same type of mirror, when used in an optical instrument, is called a
half-silvered mirror. Its purpose is to split a beam of light so that
half passes straight through, while the other half is reflected -- this
is useful for interferometry."
As far as how to do this in POV...since thickness of an object is
irrelevant to material properties, and precludes simulating several
material properties...perhaps experiment with semitransparent reflective
materials, but you can assign different materials to the 'inside' and
'outside' of an object. 'interior_texture' is the keyword iirc.
--
Tim Cook
http://home.bellsouth.net/p/PWP-empyrean
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Version: 3.12
GFA dpu- s: a?-- C++(++++) U P? L E--- W++(+++)>$
N++ o? K- w(+) O? M-(--) V? PS+(+++) PE(--) Y(--)
PGP-(--) t* 5++>+++++ X+ R* tv+ b++(+++) DI
D++(---) G(++) e*>++ h+ !r--- !y--
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