Emit from Null

This compound emits new particles from a null's centre.

Plug this compound's Emit output into the ICETree node. This compound should be plugged in to the first port of the ICETree node because you usually need to emit particles before any other node or compound can be evaluated.

For more information, see Emitting Particles from Nulls.

Tasks: Particles/Emitters

Output Ports: Emit

Enable

Turns the particle emission on and off.

Emission Parameters

Null Name

The name of the null that you want to use as the emitter. Plug the null's Out Name output into this port.

Select Rate Type

The way in which particles are emitted:

Total Number of Particles emits all particles set by the Rate parameter at once at the first frame of emission.

Number of Particles Per Second emits the number of particles set by the Rate parameter over time.

See ICE Particle Rate (Amount) for more information.

Rate

The number of particles that are created per second.

Note that in some cases where particles are deleted immediately using one of the Filter compounds (such as Filter by Weight Map) in the Emission Control group, the actual number of particles that are displayed on screen may be less that this Rate value defines. That is because some of the Filter compounds delete certain particles immediately after they are born.

Seed

This number is used as the basis for the random generation of particles. If two different particle emitters use the same seed, you may get identical results in their motion. Change the seed value to get a different random generation of particles.''

Initial Values

Mass

Defines how much matter the particles have. The value is in kilograms (kg). The mass is used to determine how the particles are affected by forces and other physical effects. Particles with higher mass values require larger forces to modify their motion.

See ICE Particle Mass for more information.

Size

Defines how large the particle is. This value is the particle radius, but the particle display size is the diameter. For example, if the Size value (radius) is 1, the diameter (display) size is 2. Some compounds use the Size value to help with collision detection or to define motion, such as Bounce Off Surface or Stick to Surface, for example.

See ICE Particle Size for more information.

Color

Defines the initial particle color as displayed in the viewport. Rendered particles do not use the particle color values unless you've set up the shader to do so. Set the color value using the standard color sliders and color box.

See ICE Particle Color for more information.

Shape

Defines how the particle shape is drawn on screen. You have a selection of different methods for displaying particles: point, segment (trails), disc, rectangle, sphere, box, cylinder, capsule, cone, and blob.

• If you select Blob, the particles are displayed as blobs only in the render region.

• To display trails, select Segment.

• To render sprites, select the Rectangle shape.

• If you want particles to collide with an obstacle, they require a shape that has 3D geometry, such as a sphere, box, cylinder, capsule, or cone.

See ICE Particle Shapes for more information.

Orientation

Defines the orientation of particles when emitted. The particle's orientation stays the same over its lifetime unless some force changes it. Set the Orientation of the particle around its local X, Y, and/or Z axes. Then set the Angle value, which is the amount of rotation in degrees around these axes.

See ICE Particle Orientation for more information.

State ID

When using the State nodes to define particle behavior, this value defines which state the particles will be using when created.

See Setting the Particle’s State ID for more information.

Direction and Speed

Select Emit Direction

Controls the direction in which the particles are emitted using the Direction values (below) that you define. The particle's direction stays the same over its lifetime until some type of force changes it.

See ICE Particle Direction for more information.

Direction

Set this value to control the initial direction of movement for all new particles. These values use global XYZ space. If you set all the axes values to 0, the particles are emitted but stay stuck to the emitter.

Fast Moving Emitter

If the particle emitter is moving very quickly, you may get “banding” effects as the particles as they're emitted. This is because particles are only emitted at each frame. If the velocity of the emitter is high, then you may see clumps of particles appearing as the emitter moves through space. This option can help smooth out stream of emitted particles so that there is less banding.

Randomize Direction Start Angle

Randomizes the direction of the particle as they're emitted within a range as defined by the start and end angles. These values are in degrees.

Randomize Direction End Angle

The end angle of the range in which particles are randomized.

Speed

Defines the speed at which new particles are moving when they are emitted, which is the number of Softimage units per second. If this value is set to 0, the particles are emitted, but simply remain on the emitting object.

This parameter controls only the initial speed, but you can change it over time using a compound such as Modulate Velocity Over Time.

See ICE Particle Speed for more information.

Execute on Emit1

You can plug in nodes that have Execute output ports. These ports only get executed once when a particle gets created.



Autodesk Softimage v.7.5