Fan, Frank2026-04-292026-04-292026-04-292026-04-23https://hdl.handle.net/10012/23104Chlorophyll is the most important pigment for the sustainability of life on the planet. Its light absorbing properties, besides being directly associated with the green colouration of plants, play a key role in the photosynthesis process. These properties can also elicit fluorescence, a complex phenomenon leading to striking material appearance changes. Accordingly, its predictive simulation can strengthen the fidelity of realistic image synthesis frameworks, notably those targeting chlorophyll-containing materials. Moreover, the systematic visualization of chlorophyll fluorescence can lend itself to interdisciplinary applications in related areas such as botany, ecology, remote sensing and photonics. Despite these aspects, chlorophyll fluorescence remains relatively overlooked in the computer graphics literature, with related works accounting for it as a complementary rendering component tied to visible light stimulus. In this thesis, we introduce a biophysically-based framework for the simulation and visualization of the chlorophyll fluorescence elicited by light excitation in the ultraviolet and visible spectral domains. It employs an algorithmic approach, centered on the use of fluorescence spectroscopy principles, that can be used in the rendering and investigation of other fluorescent materials. We assess the proposed frameworkâs predictive capabilities through the rendering of images depicting fundamental qualitative traits verified in actual observations of chlorophyll fluorescence. We also demonstrate its effectiveness and applicability in realistic image synthesis through sequences of images depicting chlorophyll solutions under various experimental characterizations and illumination conditions.enrealistic image synthesismaterial appearance modellingnatural phenomena simulationfluorescenceA Biophysically-Based Framework for the Simulation and Visualization of Chlorophyll Fluorescence Under Different Illumination ConditionsMaster Thesis