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Department of Computer Science and Technology – Course pages 2021–22: Introduction to Graphics – Rendering competitions skip to primary navigationskip to content Study at Cambridge About the University Research at Cambridge Search site Home Study at Cambridge Undergraduate Courses Applying Events and open days Fees and finance Student blogs and videos Graduate Why Cambridge Course directory How to apply Fees and funding Frequently asked questions International students Continuing education Executive and professional education Courses in education About the University How the University and Colleges work History Visiting the University Term dates and calendars Map For media Video and audio Find an expert Publications Global Cambridge News Events Public engagement Jobs Give to Cambridge Research at Cambridge For staff For current students For alumni For business Colleges & departments Libraries & facilities Museums & collections Email & phone search Computer Laboratory Teaching Courses 2021–22 Introduction to Graphics Rendering competition Department of Computer Science and Technology Introduction to Graphics Course pages 2021–22 Introduction to Graphics Syllabus Course materials Recordings Rendering competition Information for supervisors The students had an opportunity to submit the results of their Tick 1 (Ray tracing) to the rendering competition. The winners were selected by the committee consisting of the Rainbow group members. Raytracing competition The images are rendered with own ray tracer, written in Java, completed as a part of Tick 1 assignment. The rules for the rendering competitions were: The theme for this year's competition is "The planet". The ray tracer used to render the scene can include only the elements covered in Tick 1 and Tick 1* descriptions. One allowed addition is texture mapping, which is a straightforward extension of bump mapping. The only allowed objects are planes, spheres. The XML scene description can be manually designed but it can also be generated procedurally. The scene can contain up to 200 objects. Up to 2 entries were allowed from each student, but only a one of those entries could be awarded one of the winning places. 1st Place: Bence Hervay 2nd Place: Justin Lam 3rd Place: Harry Langford Honourable mention: Bence Hervay – second entry Honourable mention: Kuba Bachurski Honourable mention: Maxwell Pettett © 2021 Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge Information provided by Dr Rafal Mantiuk – edit page University A-Z Contact the University Accessibility Freedom of information Terms and conditions Study at Cambridge Undergraduate Graduate International students Continuing education Executive and professional education Courses in education About the University How the University and Colleges work Visiting the University Map News Events Jobs Give to Cambridge Research at Cambridge News Features Discussion Spotlight on... About research at Cambridge