man/man1/pmblur.1
author Axel Jacobs <axel@jaloxa.eu>
Sun, 26 Jun 2011 17:08:06 +0100
changeset 14 b1e2580a0ca7
parent 12 a5d25b4668ac
permissions -rw-r--r--
Set status of all existing Perl scripts to 1.

.\" RCSid "$Id: pmblur.1,v 1.5 2008/11/10 19:08:17 greg Exp $"
.TH PMBLUR 1 3/3/98 RADIANCE
.SH NAME
pmblur - generate views for camera motion blurring
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B pmblur
.B speed
.B nsamp
.B v0file
.B v1file
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I Pmblur
takes two viewfiles and generates
.I nsamp
views starting from
.I v0file
and moving towards
.I v1file.
When rendered and averaged together, these views will result in
a picture with motion blur due to a camera changing from v0 to v1
in a relative time unit of 1, whose shutter is open starting at v0 for
.I speed
of these time units.
Either
.I pinterp(1)
or
.I rpict(1)
may be called to do the actual work.
(The given
.I v0file
must also be passed on the command line to the chosen renderer, since
.I pmblur
provides supplemental view specifications only.)\0
.PP
For
.I pinterp,
feed the output of
.I pmblur
to the standard input of
.I pinterp
and apply the
.I \-B
option to blur views together.
In most cases, two pictures with z-buffers at v0 and v1 will
get a satisfactory result, though the perfectionist may wish to
apply the
.I \-ff
option together with the
.I \-fr
option of
.I pinterp.
.PP
To use
.I pmblur
with
.I rpict,
apply the
.I \-S
option to indicate a rendering sequence, and set the
.I \-o
option with a formatted file name to save multiple output
pictures.
When all the renderings are finished, combine them with the
.I pcomb(1)
program, using appropriate scalefactors to achieve an average.
Note that using
.I rpict
is MUCH more expensive than using
.I pinterp,
and it is only recommended if the scene and application
absolutely demand it (e.g. there is prominent refraction that
must be modeled accurately).
.PP
For both
.I pinterp
and
.I rpict,
the computation time will be proportional to the number of views from
.I pmblur.
We have found a
.I nsamp
setting somewhere between 5 and 10 to be adequate for most images.
Relatively larger values are appropriate for faster camera motion.
.PP
The
.I \-pm
option of
.I rpict
may be used instead or in combination to blur animated frames, with
the added advantage of blurring reflections and refractions according
to their proper motion.
However, this option will result in more noise and expense than using
.I pmblur
with
.I pinterp
as a post-process.
If both blurring methods are used, a smaller value should be given to the
.I rpict
.I \-pm
option equal to the shutter speed divided by the number of pmblur views.
This will be just enough to blur the boundaries of the ghosts
which may appear using
.I pmblur
with a small number of time samples.
.SH EXAMPLES
To use
.I pinterp
to simulate motion blur between two frames of a walk-through
animation, where the camera shutter is open for 1/4 of the
interframe distance:
.IP "" .2i
pmblur .25 8 fr1023.hdr fr1024.hdr | pinterp \-B \-vf fr1023.hdr \-x 640 \-y 480
fr1023.hdr fr1023.zbf fr1024.hdr fr1024.zbf > fr1023b.hdr
.SH AUTHOR
Greg Ward
.SH BUGS
Changes in the view shift and lift vectors or the fore and aft
clipping planes are not blurred.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
pcomb(1), pdfblur(1), pinterp(1), pmdblur(1), rcalc(1), rpict(1), vwright(1)