REdiSplats: Ray Tracing for Editable Gaussian Splatting
By: Krzysztof Byrski , Grzegorz Wilczyński , Weronika Smolak-Dyżewska and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes 3D scenes look real in any light.
Gaussian Splatting (GS) has become one of the most important neural rendering algorithms. GS represents 3D scenes using Gaussian components with trainable color and opacity. This representation achieves high-quality renderings with fast inference. Regrettably, it is challenging to integrate such a solution with varying light conditions, including shadows and light reflections, manual adjustments, and a physical engine. Recently, a few approaches have appeared that incorporate ray-tracing or mesh primitives into GS to address some of these caveats. However, no such solution can simultaneously solve all the existing limitations of the classical GS. Consequently, we introduce REdiSplats, which employs ray tracing and a mesh-based representation of flat 3D Gaussians. In practice, we model the scene using flat Gaussian distributions parameterized by the mesh. We can leverage fast ray tracing and control Gaussian modification by adjusting the mesh vertices. Moreover, REdiSplats allows modeling of light conditions, manual adjustments, and physical simulation. Furthermore, we can render our models using 3D tools such as Blender or Nvdiffrast, which opens the possibility of integrating them with all existing 3D graphics techniques dedicated to mesh representations.
Similar Papers
Hardware-Rasterized Ray-Based Gaussian Splatting
CV and Pattern Recognition
Makes virtual worlds look real, super fast.
3D Gaussian Inverse Rendering with Approximated Global Illumination
Graphics
Makes 3D scenes look real with changing light.
PointGS: Point Attention-Aware Sparse View Synthesis with Gaussian Splatting
CV and Pattern Recognition
Creates realistic 3D scenes from few pictures.