It appears advantageous to have an analytical solution which is affected as
little as possible by the number of rays involved in a specific triangulation
case, and which in addition uses formulas already in use in the computational
procedures previously described. Obviously, such a solution is already available
with the observational equations (15) if only the coordinate corrections AX
^ Y and A a, are considered as unknowns. These observational equations lead
directly to the ‘corresponding normal equation system formed according to
formulas (55) by introducing (AP-!AT y! as P and Bg as a null matrix. The
necessary coefficients of the observational equations denoted by J,» 5
K, and L and L, are given in formulas (41).
This approach makes it necessary to compute, as a first step approximation,
values for the coordinates of the point under consideration. This may be done
efficiently with the use of the formulas (11), which may be written as:
X +02Z+B =0
x x
(56)
Y+0Z+B =0
J y
‚where :
; (x-x,)A, + (y-y, 94, + cD S
o Row = …- —
X Q W
a, - (x-x,)B, + (y-y,)B; + CE Loy
Q W
By =r (ad, , x.)
B T" (a 2 + Y)
The corresponding normal equation system for an n-ray solution is;
Y Z
n 0 “LA + [LB] 70
n tio T = 0 (
2 [4] * [5,1 (57)
+[ox] + [ap] =0
It should be pointed out that the roots obtained from formula (57) must not
be considered as the result of a rigorous least squares solution because there
is no indication how nearly this approach minimizes the sum of the squares of
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