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From: Jörg 'Yadgar' Bleimann
Subject: Saturn - the unlit side of the rings
Date: 10 Nov 2009 14:13:35
Message: <4af9bb5f@news.povray.org>
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High!
increase the thickness of the rings to 200 metres (rather than 20, which
would be the real thing) to get the difference object rendered correctly
at the scale I used for my Solar System (1 POV unit = 13477 kms).
I wonder how to get the shadow of the planet also extending across the
unlit side of the rings (whose ambient is 0.3, as in reality, some
sunlight is scattered through to the "lower" side)... should I try a
negative spotlight?
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
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Attachments:
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Preview of image '2009-11-10 saturn, take 8.jpg'
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> I wonder how to get the shadow of the planet also extending across the
> unlit side of the rings (whose ambient is 0.3, as in reality, some
> sunlight is scattered through to the "lower" side)... should I try a
> negative spotlight?
If you're using POV-Ray 3.7, try the diffuse backside illumination
feature: Just add another float to the "diffuse" statement. This will
have part of the illumination filter through to the other side
(presuming that the rings are implemented as infinitely thin disks,
otherwise you'd have to have radiosity enabled to make it work).
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From: Jörg 'Yadgar' Bleimann
Subject: Re: Saturn - the unlit side of the rings
Date: 10 Nov 2009 16:38:12
Message: <4af9dd44@news.povray.org>
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High!
clipka wrote:
> If you're using POV-Ray 3.7, try the diffuse backside illumination
> feature: Just add another float to the "diffuse" statement. This will
> have part of the illumination filter through to the other side
> (presuming that the rings are implemented as infinitely thin disks,
> otherwise you'd have to have radiosity enabled to make it work).
Sounds tempting... but does a version for Debian Linux already exist?
Otherwise, I will have to try it on my slow old Pentium III-933 which
runs Windows XP...
No, they are not disks (which would have no interior), but very thin
(200 metres) cylinders!
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
Post a reply to this message
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>> If you're using POV-Ray 3.7, try the diffuse backside illumination
>> feature: Just add another float to the "diffuse" statement. This will
>> have part of the illumination filter through to the other side
>> (presuming that the rings are implemented as infinitely thin disks,
>> otherwise you'd have to have radiosity enabled to make it work).
>
> Sounds tempting... but does a version for Debian Linux already exist?
> Otherwise, I will have to try it on my slow old Pentium III-933 which
> runs Windows XP...
No binaries, but Linux sources of beta.34 have long since been released
by now.
> No, they are not disks (which would have no interior), but very thin
> (200 metres) cylinders!
That might be a problem then without radiosity. While the rings are
transparent, and therefore "leak" light through the whole volume and so
you /will/ get an effect, it might end up less realistic.
As another option, with non-zero thickness media would be the most
realistic way to go anyway.
Post a reply to this message
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From: Jörg 'Yadgar' Bleimann
Subject: Re: Saturn - the unlit side of the rings
Date: 10 Nov 2009 18:27:22
Message: <4af9f6da$1@news.povray.org>
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High!
clipka wrote:
> As another option, with non-zero thickness media would be the most
> realistic way to go anyway.
Yes, I also thought about using media... but then, wouldn't it render
dead slow?
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
P.S. A funny situation - talking in the lingua franca of the Internet to
a Colognian countryman living a mere 10 kilometres (6 miles) from here...
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> High!
>
> clipka wrote:
>
>> As another option, with non-zero thickness media would be the most
>> realistic way to go anyway.
>
> Yes, I also thought about using media... but then, wouldn't it render
> dead slow?
I guess that'll depend a lot on the settings. Only light rays from a
very shallow angle will experience any significant anisotropy while
traversing the ring system, so presumably you can get away with very few
samples.
> P.S. A funny situation - talking in the lingua franca of the Internet to
> a Colognian countryman living a mere 10 kilometres (6 miles) from here...
Post a reply to this message
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> High!
>
> clipka wrote:
>
>> If you're using POV-Ray 3.7, try the diffuse backside illumination
>> feature: Just add another float to the "diffuse" statement. This will
>> have part of the illumination filter through to the other side
>> (presuming that the rings are implemented as infinitely thin disks,
>> otherwise you'd have to have radiosity enabled to make it work).
>
> Sounds tempting... but does a version for Debian Linux already exist?
> Otherwise, I will have to try it on my slow old Pentium III-933 which
> runs Windows XP...
>
> No, they are not disks (which would have no interior), but very thin
> (200 metres) cylinders!
>
> See you in Khyberspace!
>
> Yadgar
The disk object DO have an interior, just like a plane.
Altough they have an interior, I realy don't know how a media contained
"in" a disk would behave.
Alain
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From: Jörg 'Yadgar' Bleimann
Subject: Re: Saturn - the unlit side of the rings
Date: 14 Nov 2009 20:17:40
Message: <4aff56b4$1@news.povray.org>
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High!
clipka wrote:
> As another option, with non-zero thickness media would be the most
> realistic way to go anyway.
Do you mean scattering media? I started experimenting with it, but
wonder how to use a density_map (which should use the cylindrical
pattern) with it... whatever overall scattering (while also having a
density_map) color I tried, I never got any visible density pattern...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
Now playing: Television Man (Talking Heads)
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