(181)
THE VERTICAL PROBLEM IN AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
By Dr. Ulrich K. Heidelauf, Consultant for Reconnaissance,
Photographic Reconnaissance Laboratory, WABC, U.S.A.F.
Ever since aircraft have been employed carrying equipment to furnish
photogi aphy foi surveying purposes, the problem of determining the exterior
orientation of the photographs has existed. Determination of the nadir point
is a major pai t of this general problem. The complex problem is customarily
solved by spatial triangulation, referring the geometry of the photography to
accurately surveyed check points on the ground. The procedure of providing
such check points is costly and time-consuming and sometimes impossible. I
think it is generally agreed that considerable improvement and simplification
of methods and procedures presently employed in aerial photogrammetry
could be achieved if the elements of exterior orientation could be made reliablv
known.
I shall exclude in my considerations the problem of determining absolute
or relative altitudes, which has been very forcefully approached on the basis of
electronic altimetry in Canada as well as in the United States and has shown
very promising results. People more competent in this particular field of tech
nology than I should report on the result of their work as soon as it is publicly
presentable. I shall also exclude the problem of azimuthal stabilization and
reference which may become a matter of a separate presentation at some later
time and shall confine myself to the problem of verticality, or nadir point
recording, or tips and tilts, or whatever name seems to fit the problem best.
Basically, there are two different approaches to the problem of determin
ing the nadir point in aerial photographs. The first is to measure deflections of
the optical axis from the true vertical position at the instant of exposure and
to record them on the photographs. The second procedure is to prevent such
deflections by employing proper servo control to the camera mount to contin
uously maintain coincidence between the true vertical and the optical axis of
the camera. Theoretically, the two approaches are equivalent, since they both
provide knowledge of the same elements of exterior orientation. However,
some people seem to think that, for some reason or another, recording is better
than controlling the camera in the direction of the vertical as a matter of prin
ciple, because I believe the prevention of errors is better than tolerating and
recording them and making their elimination a matter of a separate procedure.
The servo control is no problem, since parallelism between gyro reference line
and camera axis can be maintained easily within 1 of arc under photogramme-
tric flight conditions. Servo control of cameras is anyway required under mili
tary condition of operation for other reasons and may therefore as well pi o-
vide continuous verticality. It can be seen that either one of the two appioaches
must provide or have reliable knowledge of the true vertical direction in flight
in order to operate properly. This, however, is exactly the point wheie both
methods have failed so far.
A great number of photogrammetrists all ovei the woild seem to have
been accepting, as an established fact, that the true vertical cannot be pi oduced