International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004
maps as shown in Figure 2 to the farmers, the risk of declaring
wrong areas can be reduced
Figure 2. Problematic area, the black outlines represents
cadastral plots, the white outline the real land use situation.
In several EU member countries. the LPIS 1s implemented in a
GIS environment using the digitized boundaries of the
references as one source and orthophotos as a second one.
Farmers either will receive maps printed by the LPIS or will get
Internet access to the system. Therefore proper information is
made available to investigate the cultivated areas. The Land
Parcel Identification System in each EU member country has to
be in production by January 1, 2005.
1.2 Net Area Determination
Farmers get financial aid for so-called Net Areas. The Net Area
is defined as the area, which can be used as arable or forage
land. Trees, buildings, wasteland etc. inside a reference area
have to be subtracted.
E s ad 4
Fa
Figure 3. Net Areas
The image on the left side with the white outline in Figure 3
shows the cadastral parcel, the image on the right side the
parcels Net Area. The information about the Net Area is
important to a farmer for his declarations. Therefore, this area
has to be determined and updated.
2. REVIEWING IMAGE SYSTEMS FOR LPIS
A great variety of imaging systems, starting from conventional
aerial cameras to digital airborne sensors and satellite sensor
systems are available nowadays. For using the imagery in an
LPIS the ground coverage of imaging systems has to be
considered, not at least because of economical reasons.
2.1 Requirements on Orthophotos
The Joint Research Center, a ‘Directorate General of the
European Commission (JRC, 2003) defined technical
requirements and recommendations for the accuracy, geometry,
radiometry and temporal resolution for orthophotos, to be
implemented in the LPIS (Léo, O., Lemoine, G., 2001).
e Absolute one-dimensional RMSE = 2.5m
(refers to EC regulation 1393/00 (EUR-Lex 2000)
The orthophoto accuracy should guarantee at least an
516
accuracy. equivalent to cartography at scale
1: 10,000)
e Pixel size smaller than Im
e Panchromatic images (minimum requirement)
e. Must not be older than five years
Panchromatic images are of course not a good choice for image
classification purposes: therefore we will concentrate on
color/multispectral images in this study.
2.2 Conventional Aerial Photography
The JRC also defined technical requirements and
recommendations for aerial images to be implemented in an
LPIS:
e Recommended image scale is 1:40,000
e The images should be scanned with a pixel size of 20
um or better.
(Léo, O.. Lemoine, G., 2001)
This recommended image scale yields a ground coverage of 9,2
by 9.2 km? The corresponding flying heights for wide angle
and normal angel camera are listed in Table 1.
Camera Type Focal length Flying height
[mm] [m]
Wide Angle 153 6,120
Normal Angle 305 12,200
Table 1. Flying heights for standard cameras and image scale
1:40,000
2.3 Digital Imaging Sensor Systems
The advantage of these systems, compared to conventional
aerial photography, is the option to record simultaneously
different spectral bands and to deliver the data directly in a
digital format. The required 1-meter pixel resolution for images
implemented in a LPIS is directly linked to the aircraft's flying
height and the ground coverage follows immediately by taking
the number of sensor elements into account.
Sensor System FOV | No.of | No.of
[deg.] | pixels per | spectral
scan line | bands
ATM (Wide Angle) £3
2 = SY. FL € ]
(SenSyTech Inc., 2002) S39 640 !
HyMap / ;
Sont favs DIE 60 si^ 100 -
Intergated Spectronics Pty. 512 200
Ltd. (Kramer, 2002) py
CASI 2 = :
Ts $12 288
(ITRES Research Ltd., 2002) | ^ r R
ADS 40 s 2
; © : 12.000 5
(Leica Geosystems, 2002) 81 3
HRSC AX 29 12172 s
(DLR, 2002) vult mtr :
8,000 x
DMC / ums
(Z/1 Imaging, 2002) 74 > >
er a = frame
Table 2. Airborne sensor systems
Table 2 shows a selection of commercially used airborne sensor
systems. Obviously, the systems cither cover a large area on the
ground or they record a large number of spectral bands. The
ground coverage is an important economical factor, whereas the
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