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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004
In the first case of single rectification, a mean plane of
projection is used for the rectification process. This is an easy
and well-known method. Features that are from both sides of
the mean plane are actually distorted. Thus, the orthoimage
does not reflect the strict reality and the accuracy depends of
the position of the points in regard to the plane. An example of
this case is given in Figure 1b.
(c)
Figure 1. (a) The original image. (b) An example of single
rectification where feature distortion is obvious. (c) Interest
point for DTM generation.
In conventional orthoimage production, a DTM that may have
been extracted through an image matching process is used for
the rectification. Such a DTM cannot illustrate the exact model
and structure of the object unless all the breaklines of the
objects are precisely described. In this case, the single plane is
replaced with a surface. Even if the surface does not accurately
express the whole structure, the result of this process is better
than the previous one.
Figure lc gives a picture on how the interest points, used for
DTM generation, are distributed throughout the whole object
area. The points’ irregularity is not enough to reflect the exact
model of the object.
The third case, the one that is of principal interest in this paper
Is been elaborated in the next sections.
3. THE PROPOSAL FOR GENERATING A TRUE
ORTHOIMAGE
The need for generating true orthoimage came up as a need in
order to outline in a better and accurate way the product of the
rectification process.
In the following a few reasons for the need of true orthoimage
generation are presented:
1. The more precise representation of the object under
rectification.
2. The conditions for object restitution are better,
especially in the areas where the surface continuity
changes.
3. The documentation restrictions are controlled better
with a true orthoimage.
4. GIS applications suited under more well-defined
specifications.
Focusing in close-range photogrammetric applications the
motivation is the accurate documentation of architectural,
archaeological or industrial objects. The orthoimage product
can be used both for the accurate raster documentation and the
extraction of vector data.
3.1 The use of a 3D model
According to the presented approach, the only structural
background needed for the orthoimage generation is a 3D
model describing the surfaces of the object.
A descriptive 3D model for the object may have a structure like
the following, where each surface is described by the
coordinates of its nodes.
begin
X1> Y1> Z1
Xo. V2. 23
X
v
te
Uu
N
2
3»
X4, Va, Z4
0,0,0
X5, Y5, Z5
Xo. V6. Z6
X7, V7, 27
0,0,0