Specular Polynomials

Author:

Fan Zhimin1ORCID,Guo Jie1ORCID,Wang Yiming1ORCID,Xiao Tianyu1ORCID,Zhang Hao2ORCID,Zhou Chenxi1ORCID,Chen Zhenyu1ORCID,Hong Pengpei3ORCID,Guo Yanwen1ORCID,Yan Ling-Qi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nanjing University, Nanjing, China

2. Southeast University, Nanjing, China

3. University of Utah, Salt Lake City, United States of America

4. University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, United States of America

Abstract

Finding valid light paths that involve specular vertices in Monte Carlo rendering requires solving many non-linear, transcendental equations in high-dimensional space. Existing approaches heavily rely on Newton iterations in path space, which are limited to obtaining at most a single solution each time and easily diverge when initialized with improper seeds. We propose specular polynomials , a Newton iteration-free methodology for finding a complete set of admissible specular paths connecting two arbitrary endpoints in a scene. The core is a reformulation of specular constraints into polynomial systems, which makes it possible to reduce the task to a univariate root-finding problem. We first derive bivariate systems utilizing rational coordinate mapping between the coordinates of consecutive vertices. Subsequently, we adopt the hidden variable resultant method for variable elimination, converting the problem into finding zeros of the determinant of univariate matrix polynomials. This can be effectively solved through Laplacian expansion for one bounce and a bisection solver for more bounces. Our solution is generic, completely deterministic, accurate for the case of one bounce, and GPU-friendly. We develop efficient CPU and GPU implementations and apply them to challenging glints and caustic rendering. Experiments on various scenarios demonstrate the superiority of specular polynomial-based solutions compared to Newton iteration-based counterparts. Our implementation is available at https://github.com/mollnn/spoly.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Reference65 articles.

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3. Étienne Bézout. 1779. Théorie Générale des Équations Algébriques. Ph. D. Dissertation. Pierres, Paris.

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