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VRAYforC4D Manual

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Home | VRAYforC4D Manual | Render Settings

Caustics

Table of Contents
  1. Caustics mode
  2. On render end
  3. Notes

VrayforC4D supports the rendering of the caustics effects. In order to produce this effect you must have proper caustics generators and caustics receivers in the scene.

In order to calculate the caustics effects, VrayforC4D uses a technique known as photon mapping. It is a two-pass technique. The first pass consists of shooting particles (photons) from the light sources in the scene, tracing them as they bounce around the scene, and recording the places where the photons hit the object surfaces. The second pass is the final rendering, when the caustics are calculated by using density estimation techniques on the photon hits stored during the first pass.

On - turns rendering of caustics on and off.
Multiplier - this multiplier controls the strength of the caustics. It is global and applies to all light sources that generate caustics. If you want different multipliers for the different light sources then you should use the local light settings. Note: this multiplier is cumulative with the multipliers in the local light settings.
Search distance - when VrayforC4D needs to render the caustics effect at a given surface point, it searches for a number photons on that surface in the area surrounding the shaded point (search area). The search area in fact is a circle with center the original photon and its radius is equal to the Search distance value. Smaller values produce sharper, but perhaps more noisy caustics; larger values produce smooher, but blurrier caustics.
Max photons - this is the maximum number of photons that will be considered when rendering the caustics effect on a surface. Smaller values cause less photons to be used and the caustucs will be sharper, but perhaps noisier. Larger values produce smoother, but blurrier caustics. The special value of 0 means that VrayforC4D will use all the photons that it can find inside the search area.
Max density - this parameter allows you to limit the resolution (and thus the memory) of the caustics photon map. Whenever VrayforC4D needs to store a new photon in the caustics photon map, it will first look if there are any other photons within a distance specified by Max density. If there is already a suitable photon in the map, VrayforC4D will just add the energy of the new photon to the one in the map. Otherwise, VrayforC4D will store the new photon in the photon map. Using this options allows you to shoot many photons (and thus get smoother results) while keeping the size of the caustics photon map manageable.
Show calc. phase - turning this option on will show the paths that are traced. This does not affect the calculation of the caustics and is provided only as a feedback to the user.

Caustics mode

Mode - controls the mode of the irradiance map:
  • New map - when this option is selected a new photon map will be generated. It will overwrite any previous photon map left over from previous rendering.
  • From file - when you enable this option VrayforC4D will not compute the photon map but will load it from a file. Hit the Browse button on the right to specify the file name.
Save to file - hit this button if you want to save an already generated photon map in a file.
File - the file name with the caustics photon map to be loaded when the Mode is set to From file.

On render end

Don't delete map - when checked, VrayforC4D will keep the photon map in memory after the scene rendering has finished. Otherwise the map will be deleted and the memory it takes will be freed. This option can be especially useful if you want to compute the photon map for a particular scene only once and then reuse it for further rendering.
Auto save - when this is turned on, VrayforC4D will automatically save the caustics photon map to the provided file when rendering is complete.
Auto save file - this option is only available if Auto save is on. It will cause VrayforC4D to automatically set the Mode to From file with the file name of the newly saved map.

Notes

  • Caustics also depend on the individual light settings.
‹ Photon map up Displacement ›
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