Fast and detailed approximate global illumination by irradiance decomposition

Okan Arikan, David A. Forsyth, James F. O'Brien

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

In this paper we present an approximate method for accelerated computation of the final gathering step in a global illumination algorithm. Our method operates by decomposing the radiance field close to surfaces into separate far- and near-field components that can be approximated individually. By computing surface shading using these approximations, instead of directly querying the global illumination solution, we have been able to obtain rendering time speed ups on the order of 10 compared to previous acceleration methods. Our approximation schemes rely mainly on the assumptions that radiance due to distant objects will exhibit low spatial and angular variation, and that the visibility between a surface and nearby surfaces can be reasonably predicted by simple locationand orientation-based heuristics. Motivated by these assumptions, our far-field scheme uses scattered-data interpolation with spherical harmonics to represent spatial and angular variation, and our near-field scheme employs an aggressively simple visibility heuristic. For our test scenes, the errors introduced when our assumptions fail do not result in visually objectionable artifacts or easily noticeable deviation from a ground-truth solution. We also discuss how our near-field approximation can be used with standard local illumination algorithms to produce significantly improved images at only negligible additional cost.

Original languageEnglish (US)
StatePublished - 2007
EventACM SIGGRAPH 2007 - International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques - San Diego, CA, United States
Duration: Aug 5 2007Aug 9 2007

Other

OtherACM SIGGRAPH 2007 - International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySan Diego, CA
Period8/5/078/9/07

Keywords

  • Approximate global illumination
  • Final gather
  • Spherical harmonics

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design
  • Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
  • Human-Computer Interaction

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