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Computer Graphics Assignment about Ray Casting

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Computer Graphics – Ray Casting

To get started: Clone this repository and its submodule using

git clone --recursive http://github.com/alecjacobson/computer-graphics-ray-casting.git

Do not fork: Clicking "Fork" will create a public repository. If you'd like to use GitHub while you work on your assignment, then mirror this repo as a new private repository: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10065526/github-how-to-make-a-fork-of-public-repository-private

Background

Read Sections 4.1-4.4 of Fundamentals of Computer Graphics (4th Edition).

We will cover basic shading, shadows and reflection in the next assignment.

Scene Objects

This assignment will introduce a few primitives for 3D geometry: spheres, planes and triangles. We'll get a first glimpse that more complex shapes can be created as a collection of these primitives.

The core interaction that we need to start visualizing these shapes is ray-object intersection. A ray emanating from a point (e.g., a camera's "eye") in a direction can be parameterized by a single number . Changing the value of picks a different point along the ray. Remember, a ray is a 1D object so we only need this one "knob" or parameter to move along it. The parametric function for a ray written in vector notation is:

For each object in our scene we need to find out:

  1. is there some value such that the ray lies on the surface of the object?
  2. if so, what is that value of (and thus what is the position of intersection $\mathbf{r}(t)\in \mathbb{R}^3 $
  3. and what is the surface's unit normal vector at the point of intersection.

For each object, we should carefully consider how many ray-object intersections are possible for a given ray (always one? sometimes two? ever zero?) and in the presence of multiple answers choose the closest one.

Question: Why keep the closest hit?

Hint: 🤦🏻

In this assignment, we'll use simple representations for primitives. For example, for a plane we'll store a point on the plane and the normal anywhere on the plane.

Question: How many numbers are needed to uniquely determine a plane?

Hint: A point position (3) + normal vector (3) is too many. Consider how many numbers are needed to specify a line in 2D.

Camera

In this assignment we will pretend that our "camera" or "eye" looking into the scene is shrunk to a single 3D point in space. The image rectangle (e.g., 640 pixels by 360 pixels) is placed so the image center is directly in front of the "eye" point at a certain "focal length" . The image of pixels is scaled to match the given width and height defined by the camera. Camera is equipped with a direction that moves left-right across the image , up-down , and from the "eye" to the image . Keep in mind that the width and height are measure in the units of the scene, not in the number of pixels. For example, we can fit a 1024x1024 image into a camera with width and height .

Note: The textbook puts the pixel coordinate origin in the bottom-left, and uses as a column index and as a row index. In this assignment; the origin is in the top-left, is a row index, and is a column index.

Question: Given that points right and points up, why does minus point into the scene?

Hint: ☝️

Our pinhole perspective camera with notation (inspired by [Marschner & Shirley 2015])

Triangle Soup

Triangles are the simplest 2D polygon. On the computer we can represent a triangle efficiently by storing its 3 corner positions. To store a triangle floating in 3D, each corner position is stored as 3D position.

A simple, yet effective and popular way to approximate a complex shape is to store list of (many and small) triangles covering the shape's surface. If we place no assumptions on these triangles (i.e., they don't have to be connected together or non-intersecting), then we call this collection a "triangle soup".

When considering the intersection of a ray and a triangle soup, we simply need to find the first triangle in the soup that the ray intersects first.

False color images

Our scene does not yet have light so the only accurate rendering would be a pitch black image. Since this is rather boring, we'll create false or pseudo renderings of the information we computed during ray-casting.

Object ID image

The simplest image we'll make is just assigning each object to a color. If a pixel's closest hit comes from the -th object then we paint it with the -th rgb color in our color_map.

This "object id image" shows which object is closest along the ray passing through each pixel. Each object is assigned to its own unique color.

Depth images

The object ID image gives us very little sense of 3D. The simplest image to encode the 3D geometry of a scene is a depth image. Since the range of depth is generally where is the distance from the camera's eye to the camera plane, we must map this to the range to create a grayscale image. In this assignment we use a simple non-linear mapping based on reasonable default values.

This grayscale "depth image" shows the distance to the nearest object along the ray through each pixel. Shorter distances are brighter than farther distances.

Normal images

The depth image technically captures all geometric information visible by casting rays from the camera, but interesting surfaces will appear dull because small details will have nearly the same depth. During ray-object intersection we compute or return the surface normal vector at the point of intersection. Since the normal vector is unit length, each coordinate value is between . We can map the normal vector to an rgb value in a linear way (e.g., ).

Although all of these images appear cartoonish and garish, together they reveal that ray-casting can probe important pixel-wise information in the 3D scene.

This colorized "normal image" shows surface normal at the nearest point in the scene along the ray through each pixel.

Tasks

In this assignment you will implement core routines for casting rays into a 3D and collect "hit" information where they intersect 3D objects.

Whitelist

This assignment uses the Eigen for numerical linear algebra. This library is used in both professional and academic numerical computing. We will use its Eigen::Vector3d as a double-precision 3D vector class to store data for 3D points and 3D vectors. You can add (+) vectors and points together, multiply them against scalars (*) and compute vector dot products (a.dot(b)). In addition, #include <Eigen/Geometry> has useful geometric functions such as 3D vector cross product (a.cross(b)).

src/write_ppm.cpp

See computer-graphics-raster-images.

src/viewing_ray.cpp

Construct a viewing ray given a camera and subscripts to a pixel.

src/first_hit.cpp

Find the first (visible) hit given a ray and a collection of scene objects

Sphere::intersect_ray in src/Sphere.cpp

Intersect a sphere with a ray.

Plane::intersect_ray in src/Plane.cpp

Intersect a plane with a ray.

Running ./raycasting should produce id.ppm that looks like this.

Running ./raycasting should produce depth.ppm that looks like this.

Running ./raycasting should produce normal.ppm that looks like this.

Triangle::intersect_ray in src/Triangle.cpp

Intersect a triangle with a ray.

Running ./raycasting ../data/triangle.json should produce id.ppm that looks like this.

TriangleSoup::intersect_ray in src/TriangleSoup.cpp

Intersect a triangle soup with a ray.

Running ./raycasting ../data/bunny.json should produce images that like this. Note: This example may take a while to compute; try using a release build if you're confident your code works.

Pro Tip: Mac OS X users can quickly preview the output images using

./raycasting && qlmanage -p {id,depth,normal}.ppm

Flicking the left and right arrows will toggle through the results

Pro Tip: After you're confident that your program is working correctly, you can dramatic improve the performance simply by enabling compiler optimization:

mkdir build-release
cd build-release
cmake ../ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
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