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root/radiance/ray/doc/man/man1/pabopto2bsdf.1
Revision: 1.10
Committed: Tue Jun 14 17:45:53 2022 UTC (2 years, 10 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rad5R4, HEAD
Changes since 1.9: +4 -4 lines
Log Message:
docs(pabopto2bsdf): Clarified Mountain and pg2 authorship

File Contents

# Content
1 .\" RCSid "$Id: pabopto2bsdf.1,v 1.9 2021/08/25 04:42:38 greg Exp $"
2 .TH PABOPTO2BSDF 1 2/24/2021 RADIANCE
3 .SH NAME
4 pabopto2bsdf - convert BSDF measurements to a scattering interpolant representation
5 .SH SYNOPSIS
6 .B pabopto2bsdf
7 [
8 .B \-t
9 ][
10 .B "\-n nproc"
11 ][
12 .B "\-s symmetry"
13 ][
14 .B "\-g angle | 'A'"
15 ]
16 .B "meas1 meas2 .."
17 .SH DESCRIPTION
18 .I Pabopto2bsdf
19 takes two or more pab-opto
20 .I Mountain
21 files, each nominally containing
22 different incident beam angles or sampling patterns,
23 and produces a Scattering Interpolant Representation (SIR)
24 on the standard output for further processing.
25 The binary SIR contains a Radial Basis Function fitting
26 each incident BSDF data file
27 and a "transport plan" matrix for each pair of neighboring RBF
28 directions in a spherical Delaunay mesh.
29 .PP
30 The SIR provides a complete 4-dimensional
31 BSDF description that may be resampled for other
32 formats such as Klems and tensor tree.
33 However, a separate run of
34 .I pabopto2bsdf
35 is needed to produce an SIR for each
36 incident and scattered hemisphere pair.
37 At most, there will be 4 such hemisphere pairs for
38 front reflection, back reflection, front transmission,
39 and back transmission.
40 Theoretically, only one transmission direction is required,
41 but it is often safest to measure both if they are to
42 be used in a simulation.
43 (See
44 .I bsdf2klems(1)
45 and
46 .I bsdf2ttree(1)
47 for details.
48 The
49 .I bsdf2rad(1)
50 and
51 .I bsdfview(1)
52 tools are also useful for visualizaing SIR and XML files.)
53 .PP
54 The
55 .I pabopto2bsdf
56 .I \-t
57 option reverses the assumed sample orientation front-to-back,
58 and is discussed below under the "#intheta" header entry.
59 .PP
60 Multi-processing may be used to accelerate the program
61 on systems that support it via the
62 .I \-n
63 option.
64 .PP
65 BSDF symmetry may be specified with the
66 .I \-s
67 option, which is one of "isotropic", "quadrilateral",
68 "bilateral", "up", or "anisotropic".
69 Any of these may be abbreviated with as little as a single
70 letter, and case is ignored.
71 .PP
72 Normally,
73 .I pabopto2bsdf
74 will assume a BSDF symmetry from the incident phi angles provided.
75 If every input data file uses the same incident phi angle, the
76 BSDF is assumed to be "isotropic", or rotationally symmetric.
77 If input phi angles only cover one quarter of the incident hemisphere,
78 then the sample is assumed to have quadrilateral symmetry.
79 Similarly, half-hemisphere coverage implies "bilateral" symmetry,
80 although it is also compatible with "up" symmetry, which must be specified
81 on the command line.
82 The difference is crucial.
83 Similar to quadrilateral symmetry, bilateral symmetry is "mirrored,"
84 meaning that the sample material looks identical when viewed in a mirror.
85 However, "up" symmetry means that the sample looks the same when
86 rotated by 180-degree (upside-down), but does not look the same in a mirror.
87 The "up" symmetry was a late addition, and involves rotating and copying the
88 input data, treating the result as anisotropic.
89 It is therefore less efficient, and should only be used when necessary.
90 Finally, if the incident hemisphere is fully covered, the final BSDF
91 is anisotropic.
92 .PP
93 If a
94 .I \-s
95 symmetry option is specified and it does not agree with the input
96 data provided, an error message is issued and no output is produced.
97 Note that only the "up" and "bilateral" symmetry options have
98 identical input coverage, so this is the only time the
99 .I \-s
100 option must be specified if the default mirroring is not appropriate.
101 .PP
102 If a
103 .I \-g
104 option is present, it will cull scattered measurements that are nearer
105 to grazing than the given angle in degrees.
106 If the word "auto" (which can be abbreviated as 'a' or 'A') is given
107 instead of an angle, then the near-grazing angle will be determined
108 by the lowest incident angle measurement present in the input data.
109 This is sometimes necessary to eliminate noise and edge effects that
110 some measurements exhibit near grazing.
111 .PP
112 The
113 .I Mountain
114 program, written by Peter Apian-Bennewitz, stores data taken by
115 his pg2 goniophotometer in separate
116 BSDF scattering files for each incident angle, beginning with a header
117 whose lines each start with a pound sign ('#').
118 Some header settings require colons and others do not, as indicated below.
119 The
120 .i pabopto2bsdf
121 program understands the following lines from each header and ignores
122 the rest:
123 .TP
124 .BR #sample_name
125 A double-quoted string containing the name associated with this sample.
126 If input files contain different sample names, the final sample name read
127 will be the one passed to the SIR output.
128 .TP
129 .BR #format:
130 The data format, typically one of "theta phi DSF" or "theta phi BSDF".
131 These differ only in their inclusion of a cosine factor.
132 The word "BRDF" or "BTDF" is accepted in place of "BSDF".
133 Any other specification or a format missing generates an error.
134 .TP
135 .BR #intheta
136 The incident theta (polar) angle in degrees, measured from the sample's
137 surface normal.
138 Theta values should be between 0 and 180, where values less than 90
139 are considered incident to the "front" side of the sample, and
140 theta values greater than 90 are incident to the "back" side in
141 the standard coordinate system.
142 Notions of "front" and "back" may be reversed using the
143 .I -t
144 option if desired.
145 .TP
146 .BR #inphi
147 The incident phi (azimuthal) angle in degrees counter-clockwise as
148 seen from the "front" side of the sample.
149 .TP
150 .BR #incident_angle
151 The incident theta and phi angles are each given in this header
152 line, offered as an alternative to separate "#intheta" and "#inphi"
153 angles.
154 The interpretation is the same as above.
155 .TP
156 .BR #upphi
157 If present, this phi angle that corresponds to
158 the sample "up" orientation.
159 By default, it is assumed to be 0, meaning that "up"
160 is phi=0.
161 To get the standard RADIANCE coordinates for BSDFs, "#upphi" should
162 be set to 90 (degrees).
163 .TP
164 .BR #colorimetry:
165 Two colorimetry values are currently understood: "CIE-Y" and "CIE-XYZ".
166 The default "CIE-Y" colorimetry
167 takes each DSF or BSDF value as photometric.
168 If "CIE-XYZ" is specified, then the DSF or BSDF values must be triplets
169 corresponding to CIE XYZ values.
170 Such files are typically produced by the
171 .I pabopto2xyz(1)
172 tool rather than
173 .I Mountain,
174 directly.
175 .PP
176 The BSDF scattering data follows the header in unspecified order,
177 where each line in the file
178 contains the scattered theta and phi angles measured in the same
179 coordinate system as incident theta and phi, followed by the DSF
180 or BSDF value, which may either be a single photometric quantity
181 for "CIE-Y" colorimetry or a triplet if the colorimetry is "CIE-XYZ".
182 A minimal incident BSDF data file might contain:
183 .sp
184 .nf
185 #incident_angle 82.5 180
186 #format: theta phi DSF
187 84.968 125.790 0.009744
188 84.889 125.610 0.007737
189 84.805 125.427 0.008569
190 ...
191 .fi
192 .sp
193 The above header is equivalent to the more complete version below:
194 .sp
195 .nf
196 #format: theta phi DSF
197 #incident_angle 82.5 180
198 #intheta 82.5
199 #inphi 180
200 #upphi 0
201 #colorimetry: CIE-Y
202 84.968 125.790 0.009744
203 84.889 125.610 0.007737
204 84.805 125.427 0.008569
205 ...
206 .fi
207 .sp
208 The ordering of the header and data lines is unimportant,
209 but all header lines must precede all data lines in each input file.
210 .SH EXAMPLE
211 To generate an SIR file from a collection of transmission measurements
212 of a material with 180-degree symmetry using 4 processes:
213 .IP "" .2i
214 pabopto2bsdf -n 4 -s up f*_Tvis.txt > front_trans.sir
215 .PP
216 To combine this with front reflection measurements into a Klems BSDF file:
217 .IP "" .2i
218 pabopto2bsdf -n 4 -s up f*_Rvis.txt > front_refl.sir
219 .br
220 bsdf2klems front_trans.sir front_refl.sir > Klems_bsdf.xml
221 .SH NOTES
222 If the BSDF is being mirrored and there is no measured theta=0 incident
223 angle data file, this part of the distribution is filled in
224 by a special procedure.
225 This is important because there is no way to extrapolate missing
226 data at normal incidence.
227 .PP
228 The BSDF is extrapolated past the last measured theta angles towards
229 grazing using a constant value plus a single Gaussian lobe if one can
230 be reasonably fit to the near-grazing data.
231 This lobe will always be in the mirror direction in the case of
232 reflection, or the "through" direction in the case
233 of transmission.
234 The magnitude and width of this lobe is stored in the output header,
235 along with the constant value.
236 Both the lobe and the constant are neutral values, even with CIE-XYZ
237 colorimetry.
238 .PP
239 While there is no explicit handling of infrared or solar radiometry,
240 any single-channel BSDF will be created the same, and the final XML
241 file generated by
242 .I bsdf2klems
243 or
244 .I bsdf2ttree
245 can be edited to specify a different radiometry.
246 The interpolation process in
247 .I pabopto2bsdf
248 is not affected by this.
249 .PP
250 The standard BSDF coordinates in RADIANCE have the theta=0 direction
251 corresponding to the front-side surface normal.
252 The phi=0 direction points to the right as seen from the front, and
253 phi=90 degrees corresponds to the "up" orientation for the sample.
254 The same theta and phi are used for incoming and scattered angles,
255 so theta=180 is the opposite side surface normal.
256 This differs from the WINDOW, which use separate
257 coordinate systems for the front and the back.
258 To confusing things further, notions of "front" and "back" are
259 opposite in WINDOW and RADIANCE.
260 In RADIANCE, the normal of a window surface usually faces the
261 interior of a space.
262 .PP
263 In the
264 .I genBSDF(1)
265 utility, the world coordinate system follows trigonometric
266 conventions with theta=0 aligning to the Z-axis,
267 the X-axis matches (theta,phi)=(90,0), and the Y-axis
268 corresponds to (theta,phi)=(90,90).
269 The latter is thought of as the "up" direction for the sample.
270 This usually needs to be rotated into position, since most
271 RADIANCE models use the Z-axis as the world "up" direction.
272 .SH AUTHOR
273 Greg Ward
274 .SH "SEE ALSO"
275 bsdf2klems(1), bsdf2rad(1), bsdf2ttree(1), bsdfview(1), genBSDF(1),
276 pabopto2xyz(1)