Introduction to Maya - Rendering in Arnold
This course will look at the fundamentals of rendering in Arnold. We'll go through the different light types available, cameras, shaders, Arnold's render settings and finally how to split an image into render passes (AOV's), before we then reassemble it i
# 1 19-08-2003 , 03:19 PM
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Particle Animation - Too fast for field interaction?

Hello!

mtmckinley's Tuorial for creating Water by using Blobby Particles inspired me a hell much, Thanx for that!!https://www.mtmckinley.net/frames.html

Now I found out that I could animate my Stargate outburst and the Surface with the Blobby Sorface Particles. The problem I encountered while trying to animate the outburst was that the particles were too fast to be affected by the radial-field!
I used a volume particle emmiter (tube) and volume radial-fields to get the desired shape of the particles as they burst out, but some portions of the outcoming particles ust fly through the volume-field unaffected?!

What can I do?

Thanx for any help!!user added image

Markuz

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# 2 19-08-2003 , 03:29 PM
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..Oh, and I can't make the animation slower as the whole process has to happen within 6-10 frames.
It worked just fine when the along axes value of the volume emitter was about 10 or so, but after I turned it up to 200 it looked similar to the image I posted above... user added image

# 3 19-08-2003 , 04:25 PM
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I know the effect you're going for (big stargate fan) and it's a toughie. The movie and tv show actually use actual water video as the main source of their effect (with particles thrown in for effect). Only thing I know to tell you is to keep experiementing. You could perhaps create a cylinder and have the particles collide with it, but make it completely transparant so it won't render.

# 4 19-08-2003 , 06:08 PM
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You could also set your particles to die as they hit/exit the volume shape.


Israel "Izzy" Long
Motion and Title Design for Broadcast-Film-DS
izzylong.com
# 5 19-08-2003 , 08:56 PM
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Hello!

Thanks for your advices. I think I've got it now. I used several volume radial fields, 1 with a positive Magnitude at the begining, and to with a negative differnetly strong magnitude after that. Additionally I've added a Newton field behind the Outburst to pull the particles back and let them fall a bit about a quarter way...

I am quite happy with the animation, although the renderings don't look too well..

I used blobby surfaces, but it takes soooooooo unbelievable long to render the scene when I use as much particles to crate the desired effect (about 10.000 per second) of a single blobby surface user added image

Also the Surface of the Wormhole isn't quite satisfying. I also used a volume cone emitter and blobby surface particles, but I don't know how to make a THIN surface with them? When I turn down the radius of the particles, the surface gets holes, but when I turn up the radius the whole surface gets thick...
Also I don't want THAT much individual particles as the surface shall look.. well... when you know the series you know what I meanuser added image The surface isn't rough... So the Radius shall be great..

I tried to scale just along the z-axes, but then again, the surface gets holes...

mhh.. I guess I won't get a nice result with reasonable render times, those particles eat performance for breakfast user added image

Markuz

# 6 19-08-2003 , 09:17 PM
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Maybe you could render out a playblast of what you are talking about?

so to see anything that we might be able to help you out with a bit moreuser added image


Israel "Izzy" Long
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# 7 20-08-2003 , 09:44 AM
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Hi!

Sure, I'll do that along with the Stargate Playblast today..
Every help or advice/comment is appreciated user added image

Regards

Markuz

# 8 20-08-2003 , 11:23 AM
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Hi!

So here's the basic outburst-animation : https://markussel.tripod.com/WormholeParticles.avi

I turned the outburst particle radius down for the playblast so you can see their individual movement better...

I'm still not happy with the rendering times and the result and haven't found a reasonable balance between them user added image..

Regards

Markuz

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# 9 20-08-2003 , 02:35 PM
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Ok, nice animation by the wayuser added image

So, correct me if I am wrong, but your 2 current questions are realy regarding possibly DEcreasing the physical radius of the "surface" particles, and then getting your animation a little bit better?

Did I understand you correctly?


Israel "Izzy" Long
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# 10 20-08-2003 , 08:49 PM
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Well, quite :p

I want the surface of the wormhole to look like one single continous surface without holes and too a too significant striking structure that would look "rough".. Well, It's supposed to look like a water surface or like the effect I created with my last nurbs-surface I used (see finished work section for my finished Stargate stills), but should still be able to "build up" like you see it in the TV-series. The surface starts to build up from the centre until the whole circle is closed with one surface...

The outblast should look like water being pushed down from a turbine or jet-engine when you look at it from underneath the water-surface (that's how the original effect was created I think)..

All that should happen with as few particles as possible so that I could get a reasonable render-time on my quite slow machine

Any help / proposal is highly appreciated!

Best Regards

Markuz

# 11 21-08-2003 , 07:38 PM
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# 12 21-08-2003 , 08:12 PM
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You know, I was thinking, and maybe Mike can chime in on this one, but have you thought about using blend-shapes?

It would be time consuming, but if you are going for realism, this might give you an easier shot?

Ok,
You could create a nurbs curve along the side profile of the "effect" that defines the shape in its' "outer-most" sploosh position, then make that shape your base shape.

Then, you could use Mayas modifiers, vertice tweaks, etc, to squish the shape back down to look closer to the "calmer" surface using the same geometry, and make that another blend.

Then, using that blend shape animation, add a wave or sine deformer to give the needed rough and calm ripples as it animates.

Then, shade your water geometry with an ocean shader, or whatever you got for water, and animate it to look like it is rippling, and moving as the blend happensuser added image

Then, make your surface an emitter, and rock on with some blobbies, point-type wisps, etc. coming off of the surface to add depth and more realism.

NOW, the hard part:

*Connect a SDK to the value of one blend to the value of the emitter, AND the magnitude/position values of any fields you might have etc.
NOTE, remember that you CAN use your water surface as a SOURCE of a field, so use that to your advantage!


GOOD LUCK!!!


Israel "Izzy" Long
Motion and Title Design for Broadcast-Film-DS
izzylong.com
# 13 21-08-2003 , 08:40 PM
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Wow! Now THAT was a post user added image...

Honestly, I didn't understand everythink you tried to tell me but I will try to find out what you meant, that's sure!
I haven't used (well, at last not intentionally?) blend-shapes at all, so I'll read the maya documentary for that purpose.

But anyway, I'll be on holiday in 2 days, and I don't think I'll be able to do all that untill then, so first of all I'll render the scene without the special effect of the wormhole outburst I think... At least in case I shouldn't be able to get the paint-effects be ivisibly behind the particles ...

BIG Thanks anyway, I'll try work with your thoughts when I am back from holiday, though! user added image

Regards

Markuz

# 14 22-08-2003 , 12:37 AM
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Yep, that's a method I would attempt.

# 15 22-08-2003 , 05:15 AM
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Cooluser added image

and Thanks Mike!


Israel "Izzy" Long
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