Publication | Closed Access
Adjoint-driven Russian roulette and splitting in light transport simulation
45
Citations
34
References
2016
Year
Realistic RenderingEngineeringLight Transport SimulationPath TracingNumerical SimulationComputational GeometryRussian RouletteReal-time Computer GraphicPhysicsMonte CarloMultiphysics ProblemSpace-time SimulationMonte Carlo SamplingNeutron TransportComputational ScienceNatural SciencesGeometrical OpticParticle PhysicsMonte Carlo Method
While Russian roulette (RR) and splitting are considered fundamental importance sampling techniques in neutron transport simulations, they have so far received relatively little attention in light transport. In computer graphics, RR and splitting are most often based solely on local reflectance properties. However, this strategy can be far from optimal in common scenes with non-uniform light distribution as it does not accurately predict the actual path contribution. In our approach, like in neutron transport, we estimate the expected contribution of a path as the product of the path weight and a pre-computed estimate of the adjoint transport solution. We use this estimate to generate so-called weight window which keeps the path contribution roughly constant through RR and splitting. As a result, paths in unimportant regions tend to be terminated early while in the more important regions they are spawned by splitting. This results in substantial variance reduction in both path tracing and photon tracing-based simulations. Furthermore, unlike the standard computer graphics RR, our approach does not interfere with importance-driven sampling of scattering directions, which results in superior convergence when such a technique is combined with our approach. We provide a justification of this behavior by relating our approach to the zero-variance random walk theory.
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