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DES
SURFACE
SURFACE MESH
=> SURFACE
£=/) ELEMENT
|
| Y
E x
Figure 2-1 : Description of the surface with
surface meshes and surface elements
(from /SCHNEIDER 1989/)
coordinate system into the coordinate system of
the digital image, and thus creating the image
points, one can assign certain gray values to
these image points.
In view of the reflective qualities of the
surface, the imaging of the gray value of a
surface element is identical with the gray value
of the surface. Therefore the imaging can be
regarded as an observation.
While up to now, the knowledge of the surface
has only been assumed, the surface is now
described by approximate coordinates of the grid
points. When a surface element of an image is
transferred to the other images of the same
object with the help of the above-mentioned
approximate coordinates, the coordinates and the
gray value of the element change.
The discrepancy between this new gray value and
the corresponding gray value of the object is
the residual. The square sum of the residuals
can be minimized through adjustment according to
the method of the least squares, with the image
gray values being the observations and the
object gray values being the unknowns.
The functional model of the adjustment includes
the following observation equation for each
image gray value :
Vi,s = Gi - gi,s (2,0) (2-1)
residuals
number of the surface elements
number of the images
object gray value
image gray value
orientation parameters
Z1,...,Z24, grid coordinates
with :
t Ow «d
n nm ug ug nn
After a Taylor linearization in O and Z, the
equation can be solved according to the known
adjustment algorithm /EBNER, HEIPKE 1988/.
By using the approximate unknowns, which are
defined through iteration processes, new image
gray values can be found and applied as
observations in the following adjustments.
For the creation of digital multi image
orthophotos it is necessary to simultaneously
define the radiometrical corrections. This can
be achieved by using the gray value spectrum of
one image as a constant and adjusting the other
images and their gray values to it (2.2). The
corrections of the surface meshes remain
constant in this procedure.
Qi, 1 = 111 +72) 0'153 (2.2)
+ = image gray value
gi.j - corrected gray value
ri;,r2; = radiometrical corrections
3. PREPARATORY PROCEDURES
Digital images are the fundamental data for
digital multi image matching. Basically, there
are two ways of producing these digital images.
First, CCD-sensors can be used for the creation
of images. They produce digital images right
away, which is an advantage for further
procedures. These sensors were examined and
tested with regard to their photogrammetric
applicability and their geometric and electronic
precision e.g. by /LUHMANN, WESTER-EBBINGHAUS
1986/, /BEHR 1989/, /BOSEMANN ET. AL 1990/.
Second, if only analog images are available, or
if the resolution of a common film can not be
done without, the images have to be digitized by
scanners which operate on different kind of
sensors. Hard- and software which are able to
support this technique were described by
/SINNREICH 1989/ and /FAUST 1989/ e.g..
For the computation of digital multi image
orthophotos the orientation parameters of the
digital images have to be known. Therefore, it
is necessary to measure homologous points in the
images first. The orientation parameters can
then be defined by means of photogrammetric
bundle triangulation and adjustment according to
the method of least squares /WESTER-EBBINGHAUS
1985/.
Bundle triangulation can help define the
parameters of the interior orientation as well
(simultaneous camera calibration) /PEIPE 1985/,
/WESTER-EBBINGHAUS 1986/.
4. PERFORMING MULTI IMAGE MATCHING
As mentioned above, the method for the
computation of digital multi image orthophoto is
based on the program system PROSurf.
Before the actual computation can be started,
size and number of the surface elements must be
defined. These control parameters depend on
pixel size, imaging scale and the structure of
the object; these features fundamentally
determine the quality of the orthophoto.
The starting data, i.e. the starting coordinates
for the multi image matching, can be yielded by
defining points manually or by using points from
the previous adjustment.
It is indispensable for the creation of
orthophotos that the surface meshes are
contiguous, if the object is to be described in
its entirety. For this purpose, a measuring
strategy has been developed which processes the
images in a meander-shaped way. Furthermore, the
approximate figures of the surrounding heights
serve as heights for the grid points of the
surface meshes.
It is inevitable to test the convergence rate
and to set up stopping rules for the
computation, as the orthophotos are computed