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3D Perlin noise analytical derivative

I am currently implementing a 3D Perlin noise bump mapping using Shader Model 4 (DirectX 10 HLSL). Generating the noise itself is not a big problem (there are tons of tutorials and codes around) but what I have not found are analytical derivatives of 3D Perlin noise.

The only sites taking the derivatives into account are Ińigo Quilez's site and a related GameDev.net discussion. The problem is that in the first link the noise is value based, not gradient based (which is a requirement for me), in the second link, there's only 2D gradient noise derivative.

Note that I'm not looking for numerical derivatives as those require 4 neighboring noise samples to be generated and that's way too much overhead.

Has anyone calculated these derivatives? Is there a reference implementation that is using them?

like image 796
Karel Petranek Avatar asked Nov 28 '10 13:11

Karel Petranek


1 Answers

I also could not found a solution on the web today, so I tried to derive it.

Firstly the notations of a 3D Perlin noise is defined.

Notation

Assume the 3D Perlin noise is computed by the trilinear interpolation as

n = Lerp(
        Lerp(
            Lerp(dot000, dot100, u),
            Lerp(dot010, dot110, u),
            v), 
        Lerp(
            Lerp(dot001, dot101, u), 
            Lerp(dot011, dot111, u),
            v),
        w)

where u, v, w are the interpolation factors by the quintic polynomial of fraction coordinates (i.e., improved Perlin noise):

x0 = frac(x)
y0 = frac(y)
z0 = frac(z)
x1 = x0 - 1
y1 = y0 - 1
z1 = z0 - 1

u = x0 * x0 * x0 * (x0 * (6 * x0 - 15) + 10)
v = y0 * y0 * y0 * (y0 * (6 * y0 - 15) + 10)
w = z0 * z0 * z0 * (z0 * (6 * z0 - 15) + 10)

and dot___s are dot products of the gradient vectors (gx___, gy___, gz___)s at lattice points and the fraction coordinates:

dot000 = gx000 * x0 + gy000 * y0 + gz000 * z0
dot100 = gx100 * x1 + gy100 * y0 + gz100 * z0
dot010 = gx010 * x0 + gy010 * y1 + gz010 * z0
dot110 = gx110 * x1 + gy110 * y1 + gz110 * z0
dot001 = gx001 * x0 + gy001 * y0 + gz001 * z1
dot101 = gx101 * x1 + gy101 * y0 + gz101 * z1
dot011 = gx011 * x0 + gy011 * y1 + gz011 * z1
dot111 = gx111 * x1 + gy111 * y1 + gz111 * z1

Computing the derivatives

First, compute derivatives of u, v and w

u' = 30 * x0 * x0 * (x0 - 1) * (x0 - 1)
v' = 30 * y0 * y0 * (y0 - 1) * (y0 - 1)
w' = 30 * z0 * z0 * (z0 - 1) * (z0 - 1)

By expanding n with Lerp(a, b, t) = a + (b - a) * t,

n = dot000 
  + u(dot100 - dot000)
  + v(dot010 - dot000)
  + w(dot001 - dot000)
  + uv(dot110 - dot010 - dot100 + dot000)
  + uw(dot101 - dot001 - dot100 + dot000)
  + vw(dot011 - dot001 - dot010 + dot000)
  + uvw(dot111 - dot011 - dot101 + dot001 - dot110 + dot010 + dot100 - dot000)

Then take partial derivatives of n,

nx = gx000
   + u'  (dot100 - dot000)
   + u   (gx100 - gx000)
   + v   (gx010 - gx000)
   + w   (gx001 - gx000)
   + u'v (dot110 - dot010 - dot100 + dot000)
   + uv  (gx110 - gx010 - gx100 + gx000)
   + u'w (dot101 - dot001 - dot100 + dot000)
   + uw  (gx101 - gx001 - gx100 - gx000)
   + vw  (gx011 - gx001 - gx010 + gx000)
   + u'vw(dot111 - dot011 - dot101 + dot001 - dot110 + dot010 + dot100 - dot000)
   + uvw (gx111 - gx011 - gx101 + gx001 - gx110 + gx010 + gx100 - gx000)

,

ny = gy000
   + u   (gy100 - gy000)
   + v'  (dot010 - dot000)
   + v   (gy010 - gy000)
   + w   (gy001 - gy000)
   + uv' (dot110 - dot010 - dot100 + dot000)
   + uv  (gy110 - gy010 - gy100 + gy000)
   + uw  (gy101 - gy001 - gy100 + gy000)
   + v'w (dot011 - dot001 - dot010 + dot000)
   + vw  (gy011 - gy001 - gy010 + gy000)
   + uv'w(dot111 - dot011 - dot101 + dot001 - dot110 + dot010 + dot100 - dot000)
   + uvw (gy111 - gy011 - gy101 + gy001 - gy110 + gy010 + gy100 - gy000)

,

nz = gz000
   + u   (gz100 - gz000)
   + v   (gz010 - gz000)
   + w'  (dot001 - dot000)
   + w   (gz001 - gz000)
   + uv  (gz110 - gz010 - gz100 + gz000)
   + uw' (dot101 - dot001 - dot100 + dot000)
   + uw  (gz101 - gz001 - gz100 + gz000)
   + vw' (dot011 - dot001 - dot010 + dot000)
   + vw  (gz011 - gz001 - gz010 + gz000)
   + uvw'(dot111 - dot011 - dot101 + dot001 - dot110 + dot010 + dot100 - dot000)
   + uvw (gz111 - gz011 - gz101 + gz001 - gz110 + gz010 + gz100 - gz000)

Then (nx, ny, nz) is the gradient vector (partial derivatives) of the noise function.

Optimization

Some common sub-expression can be factored out, if the compiler cannot handle it. For example:

uv = u * v
vw = v * w
uw = u * w
uvw = uv * w

The coefficients in the expanded n are reused multiple times. They can be computed by:

k0 = dot100 - dot000
k1 = dot010 - dot000
k2 = dot001 - dot000
k3 = dot110 - dot010 - k0
k4 = dot101 - dot001 - k0
k5 = dot011 - dot001 - k1
k6 = (dot111 - dot011) - (dot101 - dot001) - k3

Also the derivatives has similar coefficients,

gxk0 = gx100 - gx000
gxk1 = gx010 - gx000
...

The computation of n can uses the expanded form with k0, ... k6 as well.

Final words

This solution has been verified against central difference method.

Although this solution looks clumsy, my experiment (CPU only, SSE) showed that, computing these derivatives by this solution only incurs about 50% extra time to computing a single 3D Perlin noise sample.

Finite difference will at least need 300% extra time (doing extra 3 samples) or 600% (doing 6 samples for central difference).

Therefore, this solution is better in performance, and should also be more numerically stable.

like image 90
Milo Yip Avatar answered Sep 28 '22 07:09

Milo Yip