Difference between revisions of "Light field"

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A light field is a superset of a volume or image.
 
A light field is a superset of a volume or image.
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"Lightfield", "plenoptic", and "[[integral imaging]]" are all the same thing.
  
 
A light field can be represented using a [[plenoptic function]], which is a 5 dimensional function. A light field can be represented in 4 dimensions using the two-plane method.<ref name="k782">{{cite conference | last=Gortler | first=Steven J. | last2=Grzeszczuk | first2=Radek | last3=Szeliski | first3=Richard | last4=Cohen | first4=Michael F. | title=The lumigraph | publisher=ACM | date=1996 | isbn=978-0-89791-746-9 | doi=10.1145/237170.237200 | page=43–54}}</ref>
 
A light field can be represented using a [[plenoptic function]], which is a 5 dimensional function. A light field can be represented in 4 dimensions using the two-plane method.<ref name="k782">{{cite conference | last=Gortler | first=Steven J. | last2=Grzeszczuk | first2=Radek | last3=Szeliski | first3=Richard | last4=Cohen | first4=Michael F. | title=The lumigraph | publisher=ACM | date=1996 | isbn=978-0-89791-746-9 | doi=10.1145/237170.237200 | page=43–54}}</ref>

Revision as of 18:50, 27 July 2024

A lightfield is an area or volume of light treated as a set of rays, where each ray has a magnitude and angle. A light field is the set of light rays flowing through a point, surface or volume from every direction. It approximately represents how light travels in physical space from a ray optics perspective.

A light field can be full color or it can be black and white. It is also known as a radiance field.

A light field can be displayed using a light field display, which is a type of multifocal display.

It is possible to record a light field using a light field camera, such as a camera from Lytro.

A light field is a superset of a volume or image.

"Lightfield", "plenoptic", and "integral imaging" are all the same thing.

A light field can be represented using a plenoptic function, which is a 5 dimensional function. A light field can be represented in 4 dimensions using the two-plane method.[1]

Light fields are useful for 3D because the largest or second largest factor that determines focus is the angle of rays coming into the eye.

A light field is typically non-relativistic.

Representation

There are multiple ways to represent a light field using data. A method is the two-plane method.

History

Leonardo da Vinci explored the idea of a scene consisting of light rays of various angles in the 1500s.[2]

The term "light field" was used by A. Gershun in a 1936 paper, published in an english translation in the year 1939.

Work in computational light fields was done by Marc Levoy and Pat Hanrahan in about 1995 and 1996.[3]

Light field rendering research in the 1990s was focused on novel viewpoints for existing data, but entirely for 2D screens.[4]

See also

References