Title: Shedding Light on the Weather
1Shedding Light on the Weather
Srinivasa Narasimhan and Shree
Nayar Computer Science Department Columbia
University
IEEE CVPR Conference June 2003, Madison, USA
Sponsors DARPA Human ID, NSF
2Computer Vision in Bad Weather
3D Visualization
Computed Dehazed Image
Mild Haze
Dense Haze
3Light Sources in Bad Weather
Mist
Fog
4Multiple Scattering in the Atmosphere
Incident Beam
Particle
5Radiative Transfer
Infinitesimal Scattering Volume
Direction
Exiting Beam Radiance
dR
Incident Beam Radiance
6Light Source in a Spherical Medium
Isotropic Source
Homogeneous Medium
7Axially Symmetric Phase Functions
Exiting Direction
Incident Direction
8Light Source in a Spherical Medium
Isotropic Source
Homogeneous Medium
Spherical Radiative Transfer Equation
Chandrasekhar 1960
Cosine of Angle
Phase Function
Light Field
Optical Thickness
9Analytic Multiple Scattering Solution
Scattered Light Field
10Highlights of the Model
- Single and Multiple Scattering
- Absorbing and Purely Scattering Media
- Isotropic and Anisotropic Phase Functions
11Scattered Light Field vs. Weather Condition
Angular PSF Scattered Light Field at a
Point
12Validation Multiple Scattering in Milk
13Model Fit Accuracy
Low Milk Concentration
High Milk Concentration
14Rendering Glows using Convolution
Original Image
Joint work with Ramamoorthi (submitted to TOG)
15Single versus Multiple Scattering
Original Image
Joint work with Ramamoorthi (submitted to TOG)
16Inverse RTE Weather from APSF
17A Camera-based Weather Station
45 images of a light source (WILD Database ECCV
02)
Ground Truth
Estimated
Ground Truth
Estimated
18Active Visibility Meter for Ground Truth
19Summary
20Prior Work on Radiative Transfer
Chandrasekhar 1960 , Ishimaru 1997
21Scattering Space of Weather Conditions
Phase Function Parameter, q
1
0
0
10
Optical Thickness, T
22Axially Symmetric Phase Functions
Incident Direction
23Effect of Source Visibility
24Scattering is Everywhere
Computer Vision
Computer Graphics