Full text: Proceedings, XXth congress (Part 4)

International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B4. Istanbul 2004 
  
  
Specifications 
IKONOS H 
Satellite 
QuickBird II 
Satellite 
  
First Launch 
September 24, 1999 
October 18, 2001 
  
  
  
  
  
Date 
Orbit 98.1 degree, 97.2 degree, 
sun synchronous sun synchronous 
Speed en 7.5 km / second 7.1 km / second 
Orbit 
Orbit Time 98 minutes 93.5 minutes 
Altitude 681 kilometers 450 kilometers 
Nadir: Nadir: 
0.82 meters 0.61 meters 
panchromatic panchromatic 
3.2 meters 2.44 meters 
Pixel multispectral multispectral 
Resolution 26° Off-Nadir: 25° Off-Nadir: 
1.0 meter 0.72 meters 
panchromatic panchromatic 
4.0 meters 2.88 meters 
multispectral multispectral 
  
Image Swath 
11.3 km at nadir 
13.8 km at 26° off- 
nadir 
16.5 kilometers at 
nadir 
  
  
  
Équator | wominally 10:30 10:30 a.m. 
Crossing 
a.m. solar time (descending node) 
Time 
Approximately 3 1-3.5 days 
Revisit Time days at 1-meter depending on 
resolution, latitude 
40° latitude (30° off nadir) 
Dynamic m Je : 
Range 11 bits per pixel 11 bits per pixel 
  
Image Bands 
  
  
Panchromatic, blue, 
green, red, near 
infrared 
  
Panchromatic, blue, 
green, red, near 
infrared 
  
  
Table 2. Technical specifications of IKONOS and QuickBird 
satellites (Space Imaging, 2002; Digital Globe, 2002) 
  
  
RATIONAL FUNCTIONS 
Both IKONOS and QuickBird stereo images are provided with 
Rational Function Coefficients (RFCs). As an alternative to a 
physical camera model, the rational function (RF) describes the 
transformation between the image and object spaces. The rational 
function transforms a point in the object space (X, Y, Z) into its 
corresponding image point (i, j) through a ratio of the two 
polynomials shown in Equation (1), 
. PAX. YX. 2) 
| 
P.(X.Y.Z) 
. P0 Y.Z) 
“en Phe YZ) (1) 
where the polynomial P; (i=1, 2, 3, and 4) has the following 
general form: 
690 
P(X,Y,Z)=a, +a,X+a,Y+a,Z+a,XY+a,XZ +a,YZ+a,X" 
2’ +a, XYZ+a,X' +a, XY’ +a, XZ’ 
Ya YZ ra X Zee MW Z ra ZY (2) 
2 
+a,Ÿ +a, 
+a, X’Y +a, 
This is a third-order rational function with a 20-term polynomial 
that transforms a point from the object space to the image space. 
Substituting P;s in Equation (1) with the polynomials in Equation 
(2) and eliminating the first coefficient in the denominator, we 
have a total of 39 RF coefficients in each equation: 20 in the 
numerator and 19 in the denominator. Since each GCP produces 
two equations, at least 39 GCPs are required to solve for the 78 
coefficients. 
Although they do not describe sensor parameters explicitly, RFs 
are simple to implement and perform transformations very rapidly. 
They can be used effectively for feature extraction, terrain model 
generation, and orthorectification. Generally, RF coefficients are 
estimated without the aid of ground control (Tao and Hu, 2001; 
Di et al., 2001). Thus, some biases inherent in RFs may not be 
corrected, and may be reflected in the geopositioning accuracy. Li 
et al. (2003) found a systematic error of 6 meters between RF- 
derived coordinates and the ground truth. A similar result was 
reported in Fraser and Hanley (2003). It is desirable that such 
errors in the image products be reduced or eliminated by users 
employing relatively simple methods that can be used for many 
different applications that require higher mapping accuracy. 
In this research, a pair of IKONOS stereo Geo product images 
and a pair of QuickBird basic product stereo images were used to 
evaluate methods for the improvement of geopositioning accuracy 
based on RF models. Three-dimensional shorelines were also 
extracted from both stereo pairs for coastal modeling. 
DATA 
The IKONOS stereo images used in this experiment were taken in 
May 2002 in a Lake Erie coastal area. RFCs of each image were 
supplied by Space Imaging Corp. The QuickBird stereo images 
(Panchromatic and Multispectral) used in this experiment were 
taken in September 2003 in southern Tampa Bay, Florida. RFCs 
of the imagery were supplied by DigitalGlobe, Inc. The GCPs 
(ground control points) used in this experiment were obtained 
from GPS surveys conducted in Ohio in March 2000 and in 
Florida in November 2002, respectively. Check points (CKPs) are 
those points obtained from high quality aerial photogrammetric 
triangulations of overlapped aerial images taken in the same areas. 
The accuracy of these GCPs is 6 cm in the horizontal and 9 cm in 
the vertical directions. The accuracy of the CKPs is estimated as 
0.5 m. Figure 1 gives the distribution of GCP and CKP points in 
the forward-looking images of both stereo pairs. 
The image coordinates of the GCP and CKP points were 
measured manually. Ground coordinates of the measured points 
were calculated using the RFCs supplied with the data. After 
registering both sets of ground coordinates within the same 
reference system (for example, the QuickBird images are based 
on State Plane, NAD 83, Florida West), differences between the 
RFC-derived coordinates of the control points and their GPS- 
surveyed coordinates were calculated. Figure 2 shows such 
differences in the QuickBird image measurements. The display in 
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