NAME¶
falsecolor - make a false color RADIANCE picture
SYNOPSIS¶
falsecolor [
-i input ][
-p picture ][
-cb | -cl |
-cp ][
-e ][
-s scale ][
-l label ][
-n ndivs
][
-lw lwidth ][
-lh lheight ][
-log decades ][
-m
mult ][
-pal palette ][
-r redv ][
-g grnv ][
-b
bluv ]
falsecolor -palettes
DESCRIPTION¶
Falsecolor produces a false color picture for lighting analysis. Input is
a rendered Radiance picture.
By default, luminance is displayed on a linear scale from 0 to 1000 cd/m2, where
dark areas are purple and brighter areas move through blue, green, red to
yellow. A different scale can be given with the
-s option. If the
argument given to
-s begins with an "a" for "auto,"
then the maximum is used for scaling the result. The default multiplier is
179, which converts from radiance or irradiance to luminance or illuminance,
respectively. A different multiplier can be given with
-m to get
daylight factors or whatever. For a logarithmic rather than a linear mapping,
the
-log option can be used, where
decades is the number of
decades below the maximum scale desired.
A legend is produced for the new image with a label given by the
-l
option. The default label is "cd/m2", which is appropriate for
standard Radiance images. If the
-i option of
rpict(1) was used
to produce the image, then the appropriate label would be "Lux".
If contour lines are desired rather than just false color, the
-cl option
can be used. These lines can be placed over another Radiance picture using the
-p option. If the input picture is given with
-ip instead of
-i, then it will be used both as the source of values and as the
picture to overlay with contours. The
-cb option produces contour bands
instead of lines, where the thickness of the bands is related to the rate of
change in the image. The
-cp option creates a posterization effect
where colours are banded without the background image showing through. The
-n option can be used to change the number of contours (and
corresponding legend entries) from the default value of 8. The
-lw and
-lh options may be used to change the legend dimensions from the
default width and height of 100x200. A value of zero in either eliminates the
legend in the output.
The
-e option causes extrema points to be printed on the brightest and
darkest pixels of the input picture.
The
-pal option provides different color palettes for
falsecolor.
The current choices are
spec for the old spectral mapping,
hot
for a thermal scale, and
pm3d for a variation of the default mapping,
def. A Radiance HDR image of all available palettes can be created with
the
-palettes option. The remaining options,
-r, -g, and
-b are for changing the mapping of values to colors. These are
expressions of the variable
v, where
v varies from 0 to 1. These
options are not recommended for the casual user.
If no
-i or
-ip option is used, input is taken from the standard
input. The output image is always written to standard output, which should be
redirected.
EXAMPLES¶
To create a false color image directly from
rpict(1):
-
- rpict -vf default.vp scene.oct | falsecolor >
scene.hdr
To create a logarithmic contour plot of illuminance values on a Radiance image:
-
- rpict -i -vf default.vp scene.oct > irrad.hdr
rpict -vf default.vp scene.oct > rad.hdr
falsecolor -i irrad.hdr -p rad.hdr -cl -log 2 -l Lux > lux.hdr
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward
Axel Jacobs (Perl translation and -pal options)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT¶
Work on this program was initiated and sponsored by the LESO group at EPFL in
Switzerland.
SEE ALSO¶
getinfo(1),
pcomb(1),
pcompos(1),
pextrem(1),
pfilt(1),
pflip(1),
protate(1),
psign(1),
rpict(1),
ximage(1)