IX-B4, 2012
ing coordinates of
V and orthoimage
| was presented in
oimage. Most of
between roads or
int
hoimage and on
in distance which
were analyzed
90% of the points
naller than values
vo) Checkpoints,
zure 1. Altimetry
> 32 Checkpoints
lus the difference
gain results were
h limits for error
ed in table 2.
ood and they are
n of equivalent
llts are presented
oints used in the
observed (2.651
iracy compatible
1:10,000, whose
ation limit is 5
for 90% of the
| 3 presents the
till the limits
cale.
Percentage
(%)
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B4, 2012
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia
A 5,0 24 80.0
B 8,0 28 93.3
C 10,0 29 96.7
Table 3: Classification of the results according to the PEC for
the scale 1:10,000
According to the offset values observed at checkpoints, we
calculated the average and standard deviation obtaining 3.49
meters and 2.65 meters, respectively, for the 30 checkpoints
used in this evaluation. There appears to be no significant trends
in the displacement, since the mean differences in x and y (E
and N) are 0.11 m and 0.66 m respectively. These values are
quite low when considering the pixel size (2.5 meters).
Figure 3 shows the distribution of errors (displacement) at each
checkpoint. It shows a distribution without major trends,
although the largest displacement occurred at a point with high
elevation. In the remainder of the area, including other points
with higher elevations, results are homogeneous, indicating that
the orthorectification was able to correct the relief effect.
got
Figure 3: Planimetric errors distribution
3.2. Altimetric Evaluation
Considering the tolerances established in the PEC, 94.12% of
the checkpoints presented errors till the limit (5 m tolerance) for
class A of the 1:25,000 scale. The standard deviation calculated
is also under the limit (3.3 m) for class A of the same scale.
LE90 (Linear Error for 90% of the points) was calculated,
obtaining 3.75 meters. Table 6 below shows how the accuracy
of the DEM altimetry can be classified according to the PEC,
taking as reference the scale 1:25,000.
Class Tolerance Checkpoint Percentage
(meters) Number (%)
A 5.0 32 94.1
B 6.0 32 94.1
€ 7.5 33 97.1
Table 4: Classification of the results according to the PEC for
the scale 1:25,000
Just asin the planimetric evaluation, it was observed no
significant trend in the altimetric errors, since the
average was calculated in -0.427 meters. The highest
error was 10.073 meters.
Figure 4 shows the distribution of the checkpoints errors. In this
figure its possible to observe that, despite the highest error is
located in a high altitude area, errors are well distributed, in
general.
Figure 4: Spatial distribution of the altimetric errors of the
CARTOSAT DEM
Like any DEM generated by automatic correlation from
stereoscopic pairs, there is failure in areas which the correlation
is not good. In general these gaps occur in areas with clouds and
their shadows, in places where there is a blockage in one (or
both) of the scenes of the pair; in very homogeneous area. After
verifying that these failure areas occurred where it was
foreseeable, the DEM was generated again, using the option to
fill the voids and filter results. Figure 5 shows the areas where
faults were located in. Most of those failures occured in the
southeastern part of the area, probably, because few GCPs were
used there.
Figure 5: Areas of failure (in yellow) on the CARTOSAT DEM
4. CONCLUSIONS
According to the results, CARTOSAT DEM presented
planimetric accuracy compatible with the specified to the class
B of the scale 1:10,000 and altimetric accuracy compatible with
the specifications for class A of the scale 1:25,000.
The results for the DEM CARTOSAT were according to what is
expected for a sensor with its characteristics. Cartography
Coordination of IBGE (Brazilian Institute for Geography and
Statistics) presented the evaluation of a DEM generated from
Triplet data of ALOS/PRISM, which has spatial resolution
equal to the CARTOSAT (IBGE, 2009). Results were very
similar.
Although in the present work Orthoimage and DEM derived
from Cartosat-1 data showed planimetric accuracy compatible
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