POV-Ray : Documentation : 2.6.2 Media
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2.6.1.8 Object-Media   2.6.2.1 Media Types

2.6.2 Media

The media statement is used to specify particulate matter suspended in a medium such air or water. It can be used to specify smoke, haze, fog, gas, fire, dust etc. Previous versions of POV-Ray had two incompatible systems for generating such effects. One was halo for effects enclosed in a transparent or semi-transparent object. The other was atmosphere for effects that permeated the entire scene. This duplication of systems was complex and unnecessary. Both halo and atmosphere have been eliminated. See "Why are Interior and Media Necessary?" for further details on this change. See "Object Media" for details on how to use media with objects. See "Atmospheric Media" for details on using media for atmospheric effects outside of objects. This section and the sub-sections which follow explains the details of the various media options which are useful for either object media or atmospheric media.

Media works by sampling the density of particles at some specified number of points along the ray's path. Sub-samples are also taken until the results reach a specified confidence level. POV-Ray provides three methods of sampling. When used in an object's interior statement, sampling only occurs inside the object. When used for atmospheric media, the samples run from the camera location until the ray strikes an object. Therefore for localized effects, it is best to use an enclosing object even though the density pattern might only produce results in a small area whether the media was enclosed or not.

The complete syntax for a media statement is as follows:

MEDIA:
    media { [MEDIA_IDENTIFIER] [MEDIA_ITEMS...] }
MEDIA_ITEMS:
    method Number | intervals Number | samples Min, Max |
    confidence Value  | variance Value | ratio Value |
    absorption COLOR | emission COLOR | aa_threshold Value |
    aa_level Value | 
    scattering { 
       Type, COLOR [ eccentricity Value ] [ extinction Value ]
    }  | 
    density { 
       [DENSITY_IDENTIFIER] [PATTERN_TYPE] [DENSITY_MODIFIER...]
    }   | 
    TRANSFORMATIONS
DENSITY_MODIFIER:
    PATTERN_MODIFIER | DENSITY_LIST | COLOR_LIST |
    color_map { COLOR_MAP_BODY } | colour_map { COLOR_MAP_BODY } |
    density_map { DENSITY_MAP_BODY }

Media default values:

aa_level     : 4
aa_threshold : 0.1
absorption   : <0,0,0>
confidence   : 0.9
emission     : <0,0,0>
intervals    : 10
method       : 3
ratio        : 0.9
samples      : Min 1, Max 1
variance     : 1/128
SCATTERING
  COLOR        : <0,0,0>
  eccentricity : 0.0
  extinction   : 1.0

If a media identifier is specified, it must be the first item. All other media items may be specified in any order. All are optional. You may have multiple density statements in a single media statement. See "Multiple Density vs. Multiple Media" for details. Transformations apply only the density statements which have been already specified. Any density after a transformation is not affected. If the media has no density statements and none was specified in any media identifier, then the transformation has no effect. All other media items except for density and transformations override default values or any previously set values for this media statement.

Note: some media effects depend upon light sources. However the participation of a light source depends upon the media_interaction and media_attenuation keywords. See "Atmospheric Media Interaction" and "Atmospheric Attenuation" for details.

Note: In the POV-Ray 3.1 documentation it said: "Note a strange design side-effect was discovered during testing and it was too difficult to fix. If the enclosing object uses transmit rather than filter for transparency, then the media casts no shadows." This is not the case anymore since POV-Ray 3.5. Whether you specify transmit or filter to create a transparent container object, the media will always cast a shadow. If a shadow is not desired, use the no_shadow keyword for the container object.

2.6.1.8 Object-Media   2.6.2.1 Media Types


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