International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B7. Istanbul 2004
a) 3 x 3 inch flat
c) halfsphere
magnetic mount
b) 6 inch circular flat
Figure 3. Cyra Targets
4.2 Data Processing
The data processing was carried out exclusively in the Cyclone
software modules. The first step of the processing was the
transformation of all point clouds from the local scanner
coordinate system into the common coordinate system
(registration). This processing step was performed in the
Cyclone software by a 3D Helmert transformation without a
scaling factor (CYRA 2003b.) A strict adjustment with identical
points is not provided in the software.
Three processes are available for the registration of point
clouds: Firstly, all point clouds could be registered using only
suitable overlap areas with a precision of 8mm; Secondly, the
registration can be supported by the use of ten targets as tie
points, which are scanned from different stations (the mean
distance to these matched targets (tie points) was Imm);
Finally, the transformation of the point cloud into the local
geodetic network could be performed by eight scanned control
points, which were determined with a standard deviation of
Imm using a total station. However, six targets, which were
well distributed in object space, were used as check points. On
average the difference from the check point coordinates, which
were determined by the total station, was better than Smm.
Figure 4. 3D Laser Scanning System CYRAX 2500 at Boie Lübeck
Scanning and registration were carried out as an automated
process using the Cyra targets (Fig. 3). These targets were
already recognized semi-automatically by the software during
the scanning phase. Unfortunately, the construction of the
Cyrax 2500 as a camera view scanner with a limited field of
view was a disadvantage for the measurement of long stretched
pipelines, which required several additional scans, each with an
overlap of 1/3 of the scanning area.
Finally, a 3D CAD model of the pipelines (Fig. 6) was
generated from the registered and geo-referenced point cloud.
For the evaluation, single parts of the point cloud were selected
manually to approximate geometrical primitives (in general
cylinders) in the selected and processed data. The thus
generated single CAD elements were subsequently bound to a
complete 3D model. Using check points measured with a total
station a precision of better than 10mm could be achieved for
the 3D model. The processing time needed for the generation of
the 3D model was 111 work hours in total.
5. RECORDING OF THE HOLSTENTOR LUBECK
5.1 Data Acquisition
The recording of the Holstentor in Lübeck was carried out in
the local scanner coordinate systems, i.e. no Cyra targets were
used for registration and geo-referencing of the point clouds due
Figure 5. Pipelines of company Boie in Lübeck
Figure 6. Same p: ^lines modelled in CAD.
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