inbul 2004
stereo-pair
tions was
ie 6 GCPs
n. In these
m) and the
ation. This
lace of the
generated
reference
6Km. The
2
RMS
(m)
14.8
14.8
en
N
14.8
extracted
regards to
he area of
reference
DEM is presented while in Fig. 4b the corresponding region of
DEMI is given as well. Figures 5a and 5b show a part of the
above DEMs.
Figure 3. A part of he produced DTMI
Figure 4b. The corresponding to reference DEM, region of
DEMI
Fig 5a. A part of the reference DEM
Fig. 5b. The corresponding region of DEMI
The statistical analysis of results (table 2), concerning the
produced DEMs, showed that all the solutions are acceptable
for flat and even regions, while in the highly mountainous areas
the precision is small. For example, in the basic solution (a),
while the value of the min and max error are calculated at -
[19m and 166m, the value of the mean absolute error is 7m.
467
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part BI. Istanbul 2004
The DEMI was also checked manually by overlapping the two
DEMs. The DEM quality certainly depends on terrain type and
terrain roughness. Thus in plain areas the achieved accuracy
was 0-5 m while the maximum height differences have been
occurred in mountainous and steep areas. In Figure 6 is
presented a part of the difference image between DEMI and
DEM reference, for the same area.
e
Figure 6. A part of the difference image between the DEMI and
the reference DEM
Negative errors in elevation are indicated in black and that
means that the DEM] has a smaller altitude than DEM. On the
contrary, positive errors are indicated in white. This occurs in
the areas where the produced DEMI has higher altitude than
DEM. Areas with a difference of 0-5m are indicated in grey.
3. CONCLUSIONS
DEM generation from satellite data set is a fact since new-
launched satellite images have been used to provide
stereoscopic images. This paper reports experiments carried out
for automated extraction of a digital elevation model (DEM)
from HRS data of SPOT-5 satellite, based only on the Metadata
provided by the sensor. Neither GCPs nor any kind of digital
map were available. The absence of Ground Control Points led
us to test, except the basic solution, other procedures. These
tests concern “semiautomatic” solutions in which a
triangulation technique with automatic or semiautomatic
methods of determination the tie points has been applied before
the generation of DEMs. The results indicate that the accuracy
of the produced DEMs was not ameliorated.
The other factors that influence DEM's quality are image
quality and terrain type and roughness. The pre-processing of
the images with histogram matching it does not appear to
influence the results, since the radiometry of this stereo-pair
was good. In all the solutions the matching was done with the
same high accuracy. Thus, the localization of the 94% of points
was characterized as excellent.
Finally, the terrain type certainly has an effect on the DEM
quality. Thus in plain areas the achieved accuracy was 0-5m
while the maximum height differences have occurred in
mountainous and steep areas.
4. REFERENCES
Boissin, B., Baudoin, A., Begni, G., Fontannaz, D., and Munier,
P., 2002. A new generation satellite: SPOT 5 in orbit. MEDIAS
NEWSLETTER, Toulouse, France, N°13, CNES, pp. 74-77.
Breton, E., Bouillon A., Gachet R. and Delussy, F., 2002. PRE-
FLIGHT AND IN-FLIGHT GEOMETRIC CALIBRATION OF
SPOTS HRG AND HRS IMAGES. In: Conference