Keywords: BRDF
Summary
This scene demonstrates use of the various options for attributing objects with bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) surface properties.
Details
This scene contains a series of example materials that have examples for configuring a variety of diffuse (Lambertian) and specular materials. These material configurations include examples of the following:
-
The Mirror radiometry solver.
-
The Shell Target model.
-
The Ward model.
Important Files
This section highlights key files important to the simulation.
Geometry
The geometry of the scene is completely defined in the geometry\demo.odb
file using built-in geometry primitives (boxes, spheres, cylinders, etc.).
Materials
The materials are described in the materials/demo.mat
file. The table
below summarizes the materials used in the scene:
ID | Material | Rad Solver | BRDF Model |
---|---|---|---|
2 |
Perfect Reflector |
Mirror |
N/A |
10 |
Lambertian White |
Simple |
Ward |
11 |
Lambertian Black |
Simple |
Ward |
500 |
Glossy Red Paint |
Simple |
Shell Target (method=0) |
510 |
Glossy Red Paint |
Simple |
Shell Target (method=1) |
520 |
Glossy Red Paint |
Simple |
Shell Target (method=2) |
600 |
Gold, shiny |
Simple |
Shell Target (method=0) |
610 |
Gold, slightly dull |
Simple |
Shell Target (method=1) |
The "Perfect Reflector" material uses the specialized Mirror radiometry solver, which models a perfect mirror. As such, it does not need any surface material properties defined.
The lambertian materials use the Ward BRDF to described spectrally flat reflectors that have no specular component.
The variants of the "glossy red paint" and "gold" use the Shell Target BRDF model to describe more complex BRDFs. The various variants are differentiated by the spectral interpolation method, which is discussed in greater detail here.
All of the materials (except the mirror-like material) use the Simple radiometry solver with the "low" setting, which does a good job of capturing the contributions of these well behaved BRDFs.
Setup
There are two simulation scenarios in this demo:
-
A single-frame simulation
-
A multi-frame (video) simulation
Running the Single-Frame Simulation
This single-frame simulation produces a single image file. To run the simulation, perform the following steps:
-
Run the DIRSIG
demo.sim
file -
Load the resulting
demo-t0000-c0000.img
file in the image viewer.
Running the Multi-Frame Simulation
The multi-frame simulation produces 41 image files. To run the simulation, perform the following steps:
-
Run the DIRSIG
video.sim
file -
Load the resulting
demo-t0000-c0000.img
,demo-t0000-c0001.img
, etc. files in the image viewer.
Results
Single-Frame Simulation
The single-frame simulation produces the single-frame simulation shown below:

Multi-Frame Simulation
The output of the multi-frame simulation is 41 individual image files. The frames can be scaled and encoded into a video format for viewing using a variety of 3rd party software tools (ffmpeg, mpeg_encode, etc.).
