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ANALYTICAL AERIAL TRIANGULATION, SCHUT 17
three rotations are small it will certainly increase the required number of iterations. It
cannot be an economical procedure if the linear equations are set up and solved in each
iteration.
12. The Herget Method has been developed for the third triangulation procedure and
applied to the second one. The condition of intersection is linearized not by differentia-
tion but by computing the effect of a small rotation and shift applied to the vector Vii
which is the vector from the projection centre of photograph i+1 to the end of the vector
of minimum distance.
A. differential rotation JR changes the vector V;+1 by a vector óR X V, , ,. A shift
changes the base vector B by a vector óB. Herget's linear equation specifies that by this
rotation and shift the component of the vector sum B + V; 41 0n an axis in the direction
of the present vector of minimum distance must be reduced to zero. In our notation
OR XV, C+ (B+ 0B): €^ — 0
in which
OR = oi + a,j + ask,
1
Vui (B X Vo,- Ce) Vo
1+1 sin I
( 2 Vo. X vo
sino ^
and the superscript " now denotes a unit vector.
In other words, the linear equation specifies only that after rotation and shift the
head of the vector V;,, must lie somewhere in the plane which contains V, and is parallel
to V;,, before its rotation. This is not sufficient to make corresponding rays intersect.
Therefore the linearization is not based upon sound mathematical reasoning.
As a result the linear equation differs from the one which would have been obtained
by differentiation of Herget’s condition equation and the orientation procedure can be
expected to converge a little slower than in the author's and Schmid's methods.
The linear equation has the additional disadvantage of being considerably more
complicated than the one in paragraph 6.
The linear equations obtained are “weigthed” by multiplication by sin 0. This weight-
ing is not properly based on weight and correlation of the observations and is therefore
not proper either. It only makes the linear equation a little less complicated.
It has been argued here that the Herget method fails to meet the specifications for
a sound method from the theoretical point of view on a total of three counts. Besides, in
its applications the second triangulation procedure is employed with its unfortunate
consequence.
This does not imply that the Herget method will always give inferior results. Indeed,
if no redundant observations are used in the orientation, this method will give the same
results as any other method which uses the same triangulation procedure provided of
course that in each method the iteration is continued until it converges and that the
computations are performed with the required accuracy.
i41,
On the computation of map coordinates.
13. If the strip triangulation is performed by the third of the aforementioned proce-
dures, that is by simultaneous computation of the orientation elements of all photo-
graphs, condition equations referring to the measured ground control points can be in-
cluded in the computation. In this way the strip is automatically adjusted to ground
control and strip coordinates are immediately obtained in the coordinate system employed
for the ground control points.
If one of the first two procedures is chosen it is always possible to perform the