Everything about Caustic Optics totally explained
In
optics, a
caustic is the envelope of
light rays
reflected or
refracted by a curved surface or object, or the
projection of that envelope of rays on another surface.
Caustic can also refer to the curve to which light rays are
tangent, defining a boundary of an envelope of rays as a curve of concentrated light. Therefore in the image to the right, the caustics can be the patches of light or their bright edges. These shapes often have
cusp singularities.
Such concentration of light, especially
sunlight, can burn. The word
caustic, in fact, comes from the Greek καυστός, burnt, via the Latin
causticus, burning. A common situation where caustics are visible is when light shines on a drinking glass. The glass casts a shadow, but also produces a curved region of bright light. In ideal circumstances (including perfectly parallel rays, as if from a point source at infinity), a
nephroid-shaped patch of light can be produced.
(External Link
) Rippling caustics are commonly formed when light shines through waves on a body of water.
In computer graphics, most modern
rendering systems support caustics. Some of them even support volumetric caustics. This is accomplished by
raytracing the possible paths of the light beam through the glass, accounting for the refraction and reflection.
Photon mapping is one implementation of this.
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