ray_shade: Calculate Raytraced Shadow Map

View source: R/ray_shade.R

ray_shadeR Documentation

Calculate Raytraced Shadow Map

Description

Calculates shadow map for a elevation matrix by propogating rays from each matrix point to the light source(s), lowering the brightness at each point for each ray that intersects the surface.

Usage

ray_shade(
  heightmap,
  sunaltitude = 45,
  sunangle = 315,
  maxsearch = NULL,
  lambert = TRUE,
  zscale = 1,
  multicore = FALSE,
  cache_mask = NULL,
  shadow_cache = NULL,
  progbar = interactive(),
  anglebreaks = NULL,
  ...
)

Arguments

heightmap

A two-dimensional matrix, where each entry in the matrix is the elevation at that point. All points are assumed to be evenly spaced.

sunaltitude

Default '45'. The angle, in degrees (as measured from the horizon) from which the light originates. The width of the light is centered on this value and has an angular extent of 0.533 degrees, which is the angular extent of the sun. Use the 'anglebreaks' argument to create a softer (wider) light. This has a hard minimum/maximum of 0/90 degrees.

sunangle

Default '315' (NW). The angle, in degrees, around the matrix from which the light originates. Zero degrees is North, increasing clockwise.

maxsearch

Defaults to the longest possible shadow given the 'sunaltitude' and 'heightmap'. Otherwise, this argument specifies the maximum distance that the system should propagate rays to check.

lambert

Default 'TRUE'. Changes the intensity of the light at each point based proportional to the dot product of the ray direction and the surface normal at that point. Zeros out all values directed away from the ray.

zscale

Default '1'. The ratio between the x and y spacing (which are assumed to be equal) and the z axis. For example, if the elevation is in units of meters and the grid values are separated by 10 meters, 'zscale' would be 10.

multicore

Default 'FALSE'. If 'TRUE', multiple cores will be used to compute the shadow matrix. By default, this uses all cores available, unless the user has set 'options("cores")' in which the multicore option will only use that many cores.

cache_mask

Default 'NULL'. A matrix of 1 and 0s, indicating which points on which the raytracer will operate.

shadow_cache

Default 'NULL'. The shadow matrix to be updated at the points defined by the argument 'cache_mask'. If present, this will only compute the raytraced shadows for those points with value '1' in the mask.

progbar

Default 'TRUE' if interactive, 'FALSE' otherwise. If 'FALSE', turns off progress bar.

anglebreaks

Default 'NULL'. A vector of angle(s) in degrees (as measured from the horizon) specifying from where the light originates. Use this instead of 'sunaltitude' to create a softer shadow by specifying a wider light. E.g. 'anglebreaks = seq(40,50,by=0.5)' creates a light 10 degrees wide, as opposed to the default

...

Additional arguments to pass to the 'makeCluster' function when 'multicore=TRUE'.

Value

Matrix of light intensities at each point.

Examples

#First we ray trace the Monterey Bay dataset.
#The default angle is from 40-50 degrees azimuth, from the north east.
if(run_documentation()) {
montereybay %>%
 ray_shade(zscale=50) %>%
 plot_map()
}
#Change the altitude of the sun to 25 degrees
if(run_documentation()) {
montereybay %>%
 ray_shade(zscale=50, sunaltitude=25) %>%
 plot_map()
}
#Remove the lambertian shading to just calculate shadow intensity.
if(run_documentation()) {
montereybay %>%
 ray_shade(zscale=50, sunaltitude=25, lambert=FALSE) %>%
 plot_map()
}

#Change the direction of the sun to the South East
if(run_documentation()) {
montereybay %>%
 ray_shade(zscale=50, sunaltitude=25, sunangle=225) %>%
 plot_map()
}

rayshader documentation built on May 29, 2024, 3:03 a.m.