ON THE PRECISION OF STEREOMETRIC SYSTEMS )
INTRODUCTION
In structural engineering, experimental research on
model structures is often used to determine material proper-
ties and design criteria. While analytic solutions for
problems in shells, plates, and space frames are available for
different configurations and boundary conditions, these solu-
tions are, by necessity, limited to simple cases and idealized
boundary conditions. Numerical solutions, which have become
increasingly practical and popular because of the recent inno-
vations in computer science, are generally based on certain
assumptions of boundary conditions and restraints. Experi-
mental structural analysis, conducted on carefully made models,
incorporates such conditions (Lenschow and Sozen, 1966). In
structural analysis one of two approaches is used: direct or
indirect. |n the direct approach, the necessary information
is deduced from strain measurements. Strain gauges, however,
fail to register in the plastic range of loading, and thus strain
measurements have to be limited to the elastic range of loading.
Fortunately, under relatively small loads, the tested material
(steel, reinforced concrete, etc.) can be considered to have
elastic properties (Wood, 1961). Elastic design criteria,
however, are of restricted value, inasmuch as they are not
valid for greater loads under which the plastic properties of
the tested material become pronounced. Unfortunately, this is
always the case near the yield point.
1) The term ''Stereometric System is used to refer to a
photogrammetric system in which one or more stereometric cameras
are used for data acquisition.