“Estimating diffusion parameters from polarized spherical gradient illumination” by Zhu, Peers, Debevec and Ghosh

  • ©Yufeng Zhu, Pieter Peers, Paul E. Debevec, and Abhijeet Ghosh

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    Estimating diffusion parameters from polarized spherical gradient illumination

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Abstract:


    Accurately modeling and reproducing the appearance of real-world materials is crucial for the production of photoreal imagery of digital scenes and subjects. The appearance of many common materials is the result of subsurface light transport that gives rise to the characteristic “soft” appearance and the unique coloring of such materials. Jensen et al. [2001] introduced the dipole-diffusion approximation to efficiently model isotropic sub-surface light transport. The scattering parameters needed to drive the dipole-diffusion approximation are typically estimated by illuminating a homogeneous surface patch with a collimated beam of light, or in the case of spatially varying translucent materials with a dense set of structured light patterns. A disadvantage of most existing techniques is that acquisition time is traded off with spatial density of the scattering parameters.

References:


    1. Ishimaru, A. 1978. Wave Propagation and Scattering in Random Media. Academic Press, New York.
    2. Jensen, H. W., Marschner, S. R., Levoy, M., and Hanrahan, P. 2001. A practical model for subsurface light transport. In Proceedings of ACM SIGGRAPH 2001, 511–518.
    3. Ma, W.-C., Hawkins, T., Peers, P., Chabert, C.-F., Weiss, M., and Debevec, P. 2007. Rapid acquisition of specular and diffuse normal maps from polarized spherical gradient illumination. In Rendering Techniques, 183–194.


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©Yufeng Zhu, Pieter Peers, Paul E. Debevec, and Abhijeet Ghosh ©Yufeng Zhu, Pieter Peers, Paul E. Debevec, and Abhijeet Ghosh

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