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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B6. Istanbul 2004
This paper addresses the means to realize this prospect through
discussion of the results of experimental testing of stereo
IKONOS Geo imagery in Northern Thailand. The paper reports
positional accuracy of products generated from IKONOS stereo
images by applying a bias-correction technique as described
betow. Result from a second sensor orientation model are also
shown.
2. METHODOLOGY
Obtaining three dimensional coordinates from two dimensional
images requires that the position and orientation of the images
in space are known. However, although exterior orientation
parameters of IKONOS imageries are measured onboard, they
are withheld. To get around this problem, other mathematical
models are used instead of a rigorous model. A review of
replacement sensor models, which are mainly in the form of
polynomial or ratio-of-polynomial equations, can be found in
Tao et al (2000) and Tao and Hu (2001).
Space Imaging supplies rational polynomial coefficients (RPCs)
for photogrammetric processing by the imagery user. The RPCs
describe the relationship between the image and object space
and can be considered as a replacement model for the modified
collinearity equations which are widely used for line scanner
imagery. The model for ‘forward’ rational functions for image /
and ground point / can be given as (Fraser and Hanley, 2003):
BA
ST EG,
BY ZY
NES 2
(1)
where x, yp, = image coordinates
(X,Y,Z), = corresponding ground coordinates
Bp
j = 3" degree polynomial functions
The absolute accuracy derived from IKONOS stereo pairs
without ground control points (GCPs) at Reference level is 25m
(CE90) horizontal and 22m (LE90) vertical (Space Imaging,
2002). Using RPCs supplied by Space Imaging, Ager (2003)
measured coordinates on IKONOS stereo pairs over 14 test sites
in various countries and reported an average of 7.9 m horizontal
error (CE90) and 7.6 vertical error (LE90). An initial test
conducted by the authors on a stereo pair of Chiengmai,
Thailand showed an RMS error of about 7 m. These results are
far better than the stated specifications from Space Imaging.
While the accuracy attained is impressive, further improvement
can be achieved. As shown in Figure 1, the error vectors which
represent the differences between horizontal coordinates
obtained from stereo measurement and those accurately
determined from GPS measurement indicate the presence of
systematic error. Since the pointing error during stereo
measurements is much smaller than the resulted systematic
errors, it means that the supplied RPCs must contain biases.
Corrections must be applied somewhere along the processing
line.
79
The removal of systematic errors can occur at the end using
simple 2D transformation to correct the image product.
Alternatively, the bias correction of RPCs may be done first,
before the other steps of product generation. The latter approach
seems more attractive because the correction is carried out at
the beginning of the mapping process and so the accuracy of all
intermediate products such as DEM are guaranteed. The bias
correction technique used in this research is detailed in Fraser
and Hanley (2003) and will be briefly described below.
Error vector @
|
10m
Figure 1. Error vectors at check points.
Under the assumption that RPC biases manifest themselves for
all practical purposes as image coordinate shifts, a model for
spatial intersection with bias compensation, which comprises
one offset parameter per image coordinate, can be derived as
follows
ÖX ;
V j 46 ov; 0
Y elei I IS à, |^ A u^ 2)
volo: [mote cms 9o 4 7 Ar =v
Ay;
where v, and v, are observational residuals in pixels;
OX ,,0Y,,0Z, are corrections to approximate values for the
object point coordinates; Ax, Ay, are image coordinate
: : à . 0 0
perturbations or biases that are common to image i; x’, y are
the image coordinates corresponding to the approximate object
coordinates; a;;, dj, ..., a»; are partial derivatives of the
functions in (1) with respect to X, Y and Z; and x, y are the
measured image coordinates
Only one GCP is required in solving the bias parameters in (2).
The process has been carried out via the Barista software
developed by the photogrammetry research team at the
University of Melbourne. Bias-corrected RPCs were written
into another file using the same format as supplied by Space