National Repository of Grey Literature 5 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Hybrid Raytracing in DXR
Polášek, Tomáš ; Matýšek, Michal (referee) ; Kobrtek, Jozef (advisor)
The goal of this thesis is to evaluate the usability of hardware accelerated ray tracing in near-future rendering engines. Specifically, DirectX Ray Tracing API and Nvidia Turing architecture are being examined. Design and implementation of a hybrid rendering engine with support for hardware accelerated ray tracing is included and used in implementation of frequently used graphical effects -- hard and soft shadows, reflections, and Ambient Occlusion. The assessment is made in terms of difficulty of integration into a rendering engine, performance of the resulting system and suitability of implementation of chosen graphical effects. Performance parameters -- including number of rays cast per second, time to build acceleration structures and computation time on the GPU -- are tested and discussed.
Rendering of Voxel-Based Scenes Using Real-Time Ray Tracing
Menšík, Jakub ; Milet, Tomáš (referee) ; Matýšek, Michal (advisor)
The aim of this work was to create a program to visualize voxel scenes in real time using ray tracing. It included the study of various methods of such a rendering with a focus on shadows. The solution was created using Unity engine and experimental packages Unity Jobs and Burst. The thesis presents multiple ray tracing passes and SVGF technique, that is used to turn a noisy input into full edge-preserving image. The final program is able to render hard shadows, soft shadows, and ambient occlusion at speed of fifty frames per second.
Concomitant Outgrowth Event
Prokop, Lukáš ; Cséfalvay,, András (referee) ; Mazanec, Martin (advisor)
The diploma project – a short animated film accompanied by an even briefer theoretical text – is in its whole a convoluted topology of themes and approaches supposedly enclosed in a single narrative guiding the viewer through its labyrinth. A mythologizing auto-fiction, thus, lies alongside attempts at a disintegration of the human-technic duality, the dislocation of purely ocular vision from the current notion of epistemology, or the realignment of our perception of GCI – all meticulously interpreted through a world-building experiment grounded in a strictly science-fictional (and theory-fueled) imagination.
Rendering of Voxel-Based Scenes Using Real-Time Ray Tracing
Menšík, Jakub ; Milet, Tomáš (referee) ; Matýšek, Michal (advisor)
The aim of this work was to create a program to visualize voxel scenes in real time using ray tracing. It included the study of various methods of such a rendering with a focus on shadows. The solution was created using Unity engine and experimental packages Unity Jobs and Burst. The thesis presents multiple ray tracing passes and SVGF technique, that is used to turn a noisy input into full edge-preserving image. The final program is able to render hard shadows, soft shadows, and ambient occlusion at speed of fifty frames per second.
Hybrid Raytracing in DXR
Polášek, Tomáš ; Matýšek, Michal (referee) ; Kobrtek, Jozef (advisor)
The goal of this thesis is to evaluate the usability of hardware accelerated ray tracing in near-future rendering engines. Specifically, DirectX Ray Tracing API and Nvidia Turing architecture are being examined. Design and implementation of a hybrid rendering engine with support for hardware accelerated ray tracing is included and used in implementation of frequently used graphical effects -- hard and soft shadows, reflections, and Ambient Occlusion. The assessment is made in terms of difficulty of integration into a rendering engine, performance of the resulting system and suitability of implementation of chosen graphical effects. Performance parameters -- including number of rays cast per second, time to build acceleration structures and computation time on the GPU -- are tested and discussed.

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