ON THE GEOMETRICAL QUALITY OF PANORAMIC IMAGES
Petteri Pöntinen
Institute of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Helsinki University of Technology
P.O.Box 1200, FIN-02015 HUT, Finland
petteri.pontinen@hut.fi
Commission V
KEY WORDS: Geometric, Quality, Measurement, Mosaic, Sequences, Distortion, Calibration
ABSTRACT:
Creating of panoramic images is a common technique nowadays. The needed components are a sequence of overlapping digital
images and a suitable stitching software. There are several software available for combining single images together just by few
mouse clicks. They can also take care of the image distortions and adjust the radiometric differences so that the final image looks
very consistent. In addition to the commercial software there are also frec ones, which can be downloaded from Internet. Panoramic
images are used in many different contexts. Real estate agents have on their web pages 360 degrees panoramic views of interiors of
the houses for sale. Panoramic views can be found in many virtual reality and multimedia presentations, advertisements, work of arts,
etc. Depending on the usage there are different requirements for the panoramic images. For a real estate agent it might be enough that
the panorama is seamless and gives impressive presentation of the interior of the house. The most important thing is that the image
looks impressive. But this is not always the case. If the images are used for measurement purposes the geometrical quality of the
panoramic images is important. Even though panoramic images are not very often used in measurement tasks there are some cases
where they might be advantageous. Sometimes, for example, the image must be taken quite far away from the object in order to see
enough control points. This might reduce visible details. But using panoramic images taken closer to the object might give both
enough control points and visible details. This paper concentrates on the geometrical quality of the panoramic images created from
concentric image sequences. The main goal is to understand the suitability of panoramic images for photogrammetric measurements.
1. INTRODUCTION
Developments in imaging technology have increased the
production and use of panoramic imagery. Panoramic images
can be found in advertisements, artworks, virtual reality and
multimedia presentations, etc. In the Internet numerous
impressive panoramic images can be found. One interesting way
to utilize panoramic images is to combine them with laser
scanner data for modelling and visualization purposes (Haala et
al., 2004; Reulke et al., 2003; Rónnholm et al., 2003; Scheibe et
al., 2004)
There are two main streams in digital panoramic image
capturing (Luhmann et al, 2003). First, the panoramic image
can be constructed from a concentric image sequence or second,
captured using rotating line scanner. In the first case there is no
need for a special camera. Instead, an image sequence taken
with a digital frame camera or scanned from analog photographs
can be stitched to a panoramic image with proper software.
There are more than 30 commercial stitching software on the
market (Remondino et al., 2004) and some software can be
downloaded for free from Internet. Stitching can be based on
corresponding points of adjacent images (Luhmann et al., 2004)
or on the whole overlapping area (Szeliski, 1996; Póntinen,
1999). The projection centre of the camera should be stable
during the camera rotation, but if the object is far away from the
camera or approximately planar, small deviation from the
concentricity does not prevent the stitching. To make the image
sequence better concentric, a special camera adapter can be
used (see Figure 1). This concept is widely in use because of its
low costs.
The other concept, rotating line scanner, requires more
investments but produces directly panoramic output with very
high resolution. There are some commercial devices available,
like EyeScan from KST Dresden GmbH and German Aerospace
Centre (DLR), or SpheroCam from Spheron VR AG.
Panoramic images can be used also for photogrammetric
measurements (Antipov et al., 1984; Hartley, 1993; Luhmann et
al., 2004). Some possible applications concerning construction
machines and building sites are listed in (Hoske et al., 2004). In
the case of exact measurements the geometrical consistency of
the panoramic image becomes important. In order to maximize
the consistency the used instrument, either a rotating line
scanner or a frame camera with panorama adapter, must be
calibrated. The calibration of the instrument includes the
determination of the. camera parameters (camera constant and
principal point), lens distortions and the eccentricity of the
projection centre from the rotation centre. In the case of a
rotating line scanner also the tilt and inclination of the imaging
sensors with respect to the rotation axis, resolution of rotation
and so called tumbling must be solved (Amiri Parian et al.,
2003; Amiri Parian et al., 2004). The geometrical modelling and
calibration of an EYESCAN M3 panoramic camera can be
found in (Schneider et al., 2003).
This paper concentrates on the geometric consistency of
stitched image sequences. The more time, money and effort is
spend for creating the panoramic image mosaic, the better is the
result. But if someone buys a digital camera, a panoramic
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