[Radiance-general] Measuring Illuminance

Raghuram Kalyanam kalyanam at rhrk.uni-kl.de
Tue Feb 16 15:21:41 PST 2016


Hi Greg,

Please let me know how to use render here!! I tried 

rad scene.rif & render=-i
rad scene.rif & render=rpict -i
rad scene.rif & render='rpict -i'

Nothing worked. Sorry for my ignorance. It would be help full  if you could let me how to use that.

Is there anyway I could see the image in ximage and could know illuminance values for every pixel i hover or something similar.

Best Regards,
Raghu

> On Feb 16, 2016, at 8:52 PM, Greg Ward <gregoryjward at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Raghu,
> 
> In the "rad" program, you may use the "render" variable to add the "-i" option needed for irradiance (illuminance) calculation.
> 
> -Greg
> 
>> From: Raghuram Kalyanam <kalyanam at rhrk.uni-kl.de <mailto:kalyanam at rhrk.uni-kl.de>>
>> Subject: Re: [Radiance-general] Measuring Illuminance
>> Date: February 16, 2016 7:11:34 AM PST
>> 
>> Hi Rob,
>> 
>> Thanks for your reply. Could you elaborate on how to get irradiance image and convert that to illuminance using standard luminous efficacy.  I have tried using rpict as you said, but it turned out a radiance(luminance) image.
>> I executed the below command.
>> 
>> rpict -vf Views/Scene_3.vf -av .5 .5 .5 -i scene.oct | falsecolor | ximage
>> 
>> (Basically I generated radiance pictures (previously) directly with rad, I guess rad calls rpict internally. But how could we pass -i argument  to rpict in this case!! So i guess the above command might have some problem) 
>> 
>> I got false-color image with a contours of luminance.  
>> 
>> Any way I wanted Luminance and Illuminance in numerical values for corresponding to the pixels. Could you help me how to approach, or may be with an example. 
>> 
>> Best Regards,
>> Raghu
>> 
>>> On Feb 15, 2016, at 2:04 AM, Rob Guglielmetti <rob.guglielmetti at gmail.com <mailto:rob.guglielmetti at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> There are two basic methods for calculating illuminance with Radiance. You can pass one or more points to rtrace, which will return a value(s) for that specific point(s); the other way is to pass in a view to rpict, which will return values for each pixel in the view. By default, both tools return radiance. If you want illuminance, you need to request irradiance instead of radiance, and then convert that output to illuminance using the standard luminous efficacy function. 
>>> 
>>> Specifically, it sounds like you want to know how to get illuminance from the specific image you attached to your question here. In this case, you'd need to re-render the image as an irradiance image instead of a radiance image, using the -i option to rpict. With that image, you could pass it through falsecolor, producing a falsecolor illuminance map or flood plot of the illuminance on all the (non-glazed) surfaces in the image. A second option pipeline to falsecolor can plot isocontours on the original image above. See the falsecolor manpage (http://radsite.lbl.gov/radiance/man_html/falsecolor.1.html <http://radsite.lbl.gov/radiance/man_html/falsecolor.1.html>) for details.  
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Fri, Feb 12, 2016 at 7:02 AM, raghuram kalyanam <raghuram.kalyanam at bauing.uni-kl.de <mailto:raghuram.kalyanam at bauing.uni-kl.de>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Hi Everyone,
>>> 
>>> I would like to know which is the best way to measure illuminance at certain view points in the room (radiance generated picture)  below. Let me also know which tools gives what kinds of results.
>>> 
>>> <scene_Scene_3.jpeg>
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Thanks & Regards,
>>> Raghu
>> 
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