9-11 Nov. 1999
S
, 1997; Wagner, 1995).
anded greatly in the last
tprint lidars have been
'ars towards the ultimate
sy earth topography and
ey are designed with
pture the top of one tree
and can be used to map
canopy height profile
al, 1999; Harding &
s are used to accurately
] glaciers (Krabill et al.
1) has led to different
In large-footprint lidars
izontal spacing, larger
] waveform reflections.
'overing the desired area
CS.
m return
n
R Staff, 1999).
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 32, Part 3W14, La Jolla, CA, 9-11 Nov. 1999
at a lower pulse rate reducing sizes of large data files. The
lower pulse rate facilitates building systems with greater
energy per pulse. Greater pulse energy allows greater
operating height and so large-footprint systems are the
reasonable choice for orbital platforms. Greater platform
height can be a primary design goal. This in turn allows a
greater swath width.
4 CAPABILITIES
The different functioning of these systems leads to different
capabilities (Table 3). The closer shot spacings of small-
footprint lidars allow them to resolve finer topographic details
and create finer DTMs. Their lower flying altitudes and
generally narrower swaths may make them less economical
for covering very large areas. Small footprints are less likely
to find a canopy opening and in dense vegetation most shots
do not. Large-footprint lidars with their wider footprint
spacing and greater platform heights may be better for
characterizing topography of larger areas. Also, the full
reflected waveform they capture, provides a measure of the
vertical distribution of reflecting surfaces. In contrast most
small-footprint lidars capture only the first or first and last
reflection, though several are capable of capturing
intermediate reflections.
The problem with dense vegetation
Dense vegetation near the ground may be impenetrable to
small-footprint lidars that have a minimum trigger distance
between successive returns. If the lidar detects a return at 1.5
m above the ground and the minimum trigger distance
between returns is 2 m then it will not detect the ground. In
these cases the top surface of a dense low-lying vegetation
layer may be interpreted as the ground. This problem is
probably worse when there is a dense fores canopy and a
dense understory. Such vegetation strata occur in the moist
climate of the Pacific Northwest of USA where conifer-
dominated stands can have thick shrub understories (Franklin
& Dyrness, 1973). In one portion of a study area in
Washington, USA, with dense overstory, preliminary analyses
indicate only 1-5% of lidar shots reached the ground (J.E.
Means, unpublished data). In this case the true resolution of a
derived DTM will be much reduced. One approach to
compensate for this is to use a very small footprint size, e.g.,
10cm, and a high shot density so that hopefully an acceptable
number of shots will not encounter reflecting surfaces within
their minimum trigger distance above the ground.
Large-footprint lidars work around this problem of dense
vegetation because somewhere in their large footprint are one
or more small openings to the ground that taken together
allow enough photons to be reflected from the ground to
provide a discernible peak in the return waveform. The large
footprint and full waveform work together to this effect as
both are needed. This effect can be seen in the success of
Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Table 3. Capabilities of Two Types of Lidar Systems.
Small-footprint, discrete return
Large-footprint, waveform return
— Accurate elevations, 15-30cm with care
— Closer shot spacing, .2-10m
— Resolve finer topographic details
— Create DTMs 5x5 to 2x2m and finer
— Probably less economical creating DTMs of very large
areas, e.g., 10's-100's km?
— Fewer shots penetrate dense vegetation, 25-596 or less
depending on cover percent
— To get vegetation heights must first build DTM
— Difficulty making accurate DTMs under dense canopies
— Accurate elevations, 15-30cm with care
— Farther shot spacing, 2-170m
— Not resolve fine topographic details
— Create DTMs 10x10 to 25x25m
— Probably more economical creating DTMs of very large
areas, e.g., 10's- 100's km
— Distinguish ground in many or most pulses through dense
vegetation
— Relatively effective creating DTMs under dense canopies
— Ground elevation and vegetation height measured in one
shot
— Data on vegetation height profile must be synthesized
from many shots or returns
— Data on height profile of canopies obtained directly