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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004
Laser scanning and photogrammetry
Laser scanning has already shown its outstanding advantages in
acquiring 3D information on an objects surface in many
different applications within the past few years. For laser
scanning, a highly collimated laser beam is scanned over a
predefined solid angle in a regular scan pattern. While scanning,
the distance to the object is measured by measuring the time of
flight of the laser signal with high precision. Different
commercial systems are available with a broad range of
specifications. The specifications differ in measurement range,
field-of-view, measurement accuracy, data acquisition speed,
robustness, compactness, and transportability. The primary
output delivered by a scanning laser system is a point cloud
representing a sampled replica of the objects surface. The point
cloud is composed usually of a very large number of points or
vertices and, for most of the systems, each vertex corresponds to
a single laser range measurement. As for many applications the
user is not only interested in geometrical information, but also
in additional information on the object's surface, the point cloud
is frequently complemented by additional vertex descriptors
containing information on, e.g., surface reflectivity or surface
color. Almost all laser scanners provide, beside the geometry
data, also information of the signal strength of the echo signal,
commonly addressed as intensity data. Some laser sensors
provide with every laser measurement also color information by
converting the ambient light in the direction of the laser beam
into an RGB (red-green-blue) triple. The geometrical data and
the additional vertex descriptors are acquired synchronously and
sequentially and the spatial resolution of the additional data can
thus not be higher. In order to have texturing data with a higher
resolution than the laser data, high resolution digital cameras
can be used additionally.
In principle, texturing 3D models generated from laser scan data
with image data is well-established and many of the 3D data
537
processing packages provide at least some means for texturing
the surface of a 3D model. However, using images of a camera
without prior knowledge of its position and orientation requires,
for example, manual definition of tie points in both the scan
data and the image to calculate the image parameters.
Integrating a high-resolution calibrated camera into a laser
scanning system provides a very efficient, convenient, and
powerful system for automatically generating accurately
textured high-resolution 3D models. This combination forms a
hybrid sensors which is composed of a high-performance long-
range laser scanner with a wide field-of-view and a calibrated
high-resolution digital camera firmly mounted to the scanning
head of the laser scanners. As for every image taken with the
camera the position and orientation of the camera is measured
with high accuracy within the scanners own coordinate system,
scan data and image data can be combined in a straightforward
way without the need of user interaction.
fig.3 LMS-Z 360i and phototheodolite.
Utilization of this new type of hybrid data in the field of
Cultural Heritage (particularly architectural and archaeological
field) can be tackled according to a reductive approach, namely
attempting to obtain the traditional products more rapidly and
thus more economically, or from a propositional approach,
attempting to generate new tools for description and
representation of complex forms. This challenge involves not
only surveyors but also other professionals who base their work
on the results of metric survey, such as restorers, structural
engineers, and historians.
In order to satisfy the demands of detailed feature extraction,
e.g., on ancient walls, RIEGL offers now a unique solution by
combining laser scanning and close range photogrammetry, thus
making use of the respective advantages of both. The system
used for the experimental investigation is a RIEGL LMS-Z360i
laser scanner with a digital camera, model Nikon D100. It is a
portable rugged terrestrial sensor, intended for the fast
acquisition of high-quality 3D images even under difficult
environmental conditions (Riegl 2004).
The crucial idea behind this combination is not to regard those
as competitive but complementary technologies: The most
impressive result of laser scanning is the definition of surfaces,
whereas the strength of photogrammetry lies in its capability of
recognizing edges. The accuracy of the details is caused in the
high pixel density of the photo camera, the accuracy of the
whole scene comes from the laser scanner.
The secondary results derived from the hybrid data are a
coloured point cloud, a decimated mesh textured with the high
resolution images, an orthophoto and the possibility to digitize
the data in the so-called mono plot method.