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it's a radiosity scene !!!!
ok, high render quality I think. as usual, poor model and no texture
I tried too things (only one here, I'll post the other soon):
- an white inverted sphere with ambient 1 for the sky rad (this post)
- a white sky_sphere.
the results are...different !
it seems the sky_sphere is a fake sphere ! maybe you knew this, but me
no !
David
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Download 'interior.jpg' (27 KB)
Preview of image 'interior.jpg'
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oops ! not the right image !
these are the real...
the brightest is with an inverted sphere the other a sky_sphere.
in this render the difference is not evident sorry, I have destroyed the good
one. The "light" created by the sky_sphere seems to be parallel. the "light"
created by the sphere spreads around the holes in the walls.
Am I right ? or is it a scene effect ?
params:
assumed_gamma 1.0
radiosity {
pretrace_start 0.04
pretrace_end 0.01
count 400
recursion_limit 2
nearest_count 5
error_bound 0.3
}
David
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Download 'interior - skysphere.jpg' (8 KB)
Download 'interior - sphere.jpg' (9 KB)
Preview of image 'interior - skysphere.jpg'
Preview of image 'interior - sphere.jpg'
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Part of the reason for the difference could be that a sky_sphere doesn't
have a surface. When radiosity hits the real sphere, depending on your
settings it may make another level of recursion, firing more rays from
that point on the sphere. With the sky_sphere, which is just a fancy
background feature, there isn't an intersection point, so it stops.
Also, radiosity calculations are distance dependant, as I recall...and
since the sky_sphere is just a background, it's distance is "infinite",
while your sphere is obviously finite. MegaPOV radiosity can compensate
automatically(which didn't happen with the old version of radiosity),
but this might trick it into doing something wrong.
Giving your sphere a diffuse of 0(to tell radiosity to stop recursing)
and making it extremely big(to minimize the effect on distance
calculations) might get rid of some the difference.
BTW, when using solid colors, why not just use the background feature?
The sky_sphere feature is mainly only useful for applying patterned
pigments to the background...
--
Christopher James Huff
Personal: chr### [at] maccom, http://homepage.mac.com/chrishuff/
TAG: chr### [at] tagpovrayorg, http://tag.povray.org/
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