Rowquino Posted February 9, 2022 Share Posted February 9, 2022 Hi, I'm trying to simulate blowing snow, like in the video below, but am having a tough time. I'm emitting from scattered points with animated noise on pscale, density and velocity, and I'm advecting the sim with a velocity volume derived from a set of animated curves (to get the wavy motion of the snow). The problem is that the smoke disperses quickly and loses it shape, and I can't get any fine detail into the smoke however many gas disturb/turbulence settings I try (I'm using speed, derived from vel, as a control field). The pyro sim has no temperature field or buoyancy applied. In the reference the snow is fuzzy and keeps its shape throughout, and I'm stuck about how to achieve this. I've attached the .hip if you feel like taking a look. Thanks Blowing Snow Flipbook 2.mp4 Blowing Snow Ref.mp4 Blowing Snow Simulation 09-02.hip Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mestela Posted February 10, 2022 Share Posted February 10, 2022 I'm not a sim person, apologies etc... but this might give you some ideas. Smoke sims will always go soft over time. Instead I'd look at the footage and go 'it looks like worms of volume travelling over a surface, with some volume traily stuff'. So thats what I've tried here; make some lines, run them through pops so they scoot over the surface with some noise. Then rasterise those into pyro sources, and have them continually emit as they travel; the leading edge will be sharp, and you can control how the trailing edge behaves; shoudl it dissipate quickly, have some upwards billow, all that. The end result is... well, not great, but its easily tweakable, which is always the key for sim work; lots of fast iterations can beat a big slow sim. snow_me.hip 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rowquino Posted February 10, 2022 Author Share Posted February 10, 2022 Thanks for this! I'll have a look through, it looks like a good way of approaching it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.