To make the simulation even more fun I made it possible to tear the cloth by shooting a red bullet at the grid. The red sphere is pulled downward under the influence of gravity and breaks any constraints within its radius.
The early videos follow - click to download them. The later (and much better) videos can be found throughout the following pages.
Tearing the cloth |
Colouring the cloth |
Running the tornado with connected particles |
Blowing in the wind |
External view of tearing the cloth |
Zoom from view of the tornado to another |
This video demonstrates the tornado in action:
I have been continually developing a Verlet-integration based particle system inside Teh Engine and have produced a number of interesting results. The two main themes of simulated phenomenon are tornados and cloth. You can read more about these individual experiments in the next sections, as well as watching videos of the results.
An excellent resource for Verlet-integration can be found at Gamasutra.
Here are some stills:
I had this idea 9 months before I saw (or even had heard of) The Matrix - you can ask my art teachers at my school!
The only difference is the shoe-string budget: that's four uncalibrated VHS video cameras and some hot air.
Check out the video, which is the result of some morphing I managed to do several years later.
An inside view into iCinema's Project T_Visionarium:
(We tend to drop the underscore though, so it's referred to as TVisionarium or simply TVis).
This page summarises (for the moment below the video) the contribution I made to TVisionarium Mk II,
an immersive eye-popping stereo 3D interactive 360-degree experience where a user can
search through a vast database of television shows and rearrange their shots in
the virtual space that surrounds them to explore intuitively their semantic similarities and differences.