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2018年6月29日 (金) 04:45時点における最新版

Introduction to Physics Simulation

This chapter covers various advanced Blender effects, often used to simulate real physical phenomena, such as:

Smoke.
  • Smoke


Rain.
  • Rain


Dust cloud.
  • Dust


Cloth example.
  • Cloth


Water simulation example.
  • Water


Jello example.
  • Jello


Particle Systems context in the Properties window.

Particle Systems can be used to simulate many things: hair, grass, smoke, flocks.

Hair is a subset of the particle system, and can be used for strand-like objects, such as hair, fur, grass, quills, etc.

Physics context in the Properties window.

Soft Bodies are useful for everything that tends to bend, deform, in reaction to forces like gravity or wind, or when colliding with other objects… It can be used for skin, rubber, and even clothes, even though there is separate Cloth Simulation specific for cloth-like objects.

Rigid Bodies can simulate dynamic objects that are fairly rigid.

Fluids, which include liquids and gasses, can be simulated, including Smoke.

Force Fields can modify the behavior of simulations.

Gravity

Gravity settings in Scene context.

Gravity is a global setting that is applied the same to all physics systems in a scene, which can be found in the scene tab. This value is generally fine left at its default value, at -9.810 in the Z axis, which is the force of gravity in the real world. Lowering this value would simulate a lower or higher force of gravity. Gravity denoted g, measurement [m×s-2]).

Gravity is practically same around whole Earth. South and North poles have g = 9.832 m×s-2, on the equator g = 9.780 m×s-2. For detail computing of falling in Prague or Boston use 9.81373. For rendering scenes from Moon use value 6 times smaller, e.g. 1.622 m×s-2. The most popular and probably not colonized Mars has g = 3.69.

Note that you can scale down the gravity value per physics system in the Field Weights panel.