This is a forced dispersion test I've done with beta before release.
I say "forced" because it uses a very low abbe to show the spectrum clearly.
On the top row, you're viewing the original visible spectrum. Bottom row parted into two, the lower part is the original rendering of the reflection screen and the upper part is blured in photoshop to match the result with the original spectrum. The question mark shows the color beyond violet means ultaviolet. I'm not sure if it should be there and it will be checked soon.
This was a great test Tom, and its geat to have a correct spectrum.
Btw, I always get distinct bands of colors instead of a soft transition, when I do dispersion tests, is there a way to control how accurate the solution is? Or this is just a small bug right now, and I sholud always get a smooth spectrum solution in time?
Last edited by Aldaryn on Mon Jun 20, 2005 3:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Abbys IM - A small group of independent freelancers. (www.abbys.hu) System :: Intel Pentium 4 @ 3.4Ghz, 1GB RAM, Windows XP SP2
Really simple, brigth bars behind sphere with abbe 2. So, yuo say the banding is only because of the extreme conditions? I've expected to get a smooth transition even in situations like this.
Anyway, I really like the new spectrum.
Abbys IM - A small group of independent freelancers. (www.abbys.hu) System :: Intel Pentium 4 @ 3.4Ghz, 1GB RAM, Windows XP SP2
I think none of them, its just an extreme situation, and this is how its now handled.
I doubt that you'll ever need a better specrum resolution in everyday rendering tasks.
Still, I would really love to render images like this (WinOSI)
Abbys IM - A small group of independent freelancers. (www.abbys.hu) System :: Intel Pentium 4 @ 3.4Ghz, 1GB RAM, Windows XP SP2
I've downloaded the winosi scene, and gave it a try, but even with an abbe value of 2 the spectrum was not wide eneugh, and some strange artifacts (brigt colorful dots) appared.
Im not really good at optics, so, someone with some free time, and knowledge might give it a try.
Abbys IM - A small group of independent freelancers. (www.abbys.hu) System :: Intel Pentium 4 @ 3.4Ghz, 1GB RAM, Windows XP SP2
lolec: The photo is one of several natural dispersion patterns I see every sunny morning in my living room. On the window panes are a few crystal ornaments, so as the morning sun hits them they create the sort of patterns you see.
This pattern, being cast on the floor, caught my eye so I simply placed some paper on the floor and took the photo'. A drawing would only show me crouching, holding a camera!
I took this because I wanted a natural gradient rather than something computer generated.
It may be worth keeping in mind that first the sunlight went through a single pane of glass before going through the crystal object - this may have affected the result - but some natural rainbow photo's I have suggest the gradient is correct.
A few more photo's would be needed to verify the above gradient.