E
:
©
5
2
-3
4
284000 285000 286000 287000 288000 [sec]
Figure S a: Trajectory differences Stuttgart - Area
(Antenna 1, Gauss-Krüger coordinates)
3
2
51
£
$0
s
51
=
-2
3
-4
284000 285000 286000 287000 288000 [sec]
Figure 5 b: Trajectory differences Darmstadt - Area
(Antenna 1, Gauss-Kriiger coordinates)
3
H-A wax dy
2 °C
E
o
o
o
= |
2 = — em
o
=
a
2
3
-4 | L i 1 À
284000 285000 286000 287000 288000 [sec]
Figure 5 c: Trajectory differences Hannover - Area
(Antenna 1, Gauss-Krüger coordinates)
It can be concluded that successful ambiguity solutions are likely to
provide consistent and accurate GPS trajectories. But there are
exceptions, the conditions for which must be flagged out by the
software, being dependent on the details of the satellite geometry.
The internal evaluation of the restored GPS trajectories is here not
pushed any further, at this time. It remains to be seen whether the
results of different software packages and of the other test flights
show the same effects.
4
3. ABSOLUTE CHECKS
3.1 Camera air stations for comparison
The results of Chapter 2 referred to GPS data directly, no other
information having been brought in. Now, we make use of the aerial
photographs taken during the flights over the test area. By
photogrammetric aerial triangulation the coordinates of the camera
air stations are obtained. They serve as check points for the GPS
station coordinates, after offset-reduction to the GPS antennae.
The photogrammetric block, consisting of 67 aerial photographs of
scale 1 : 13000, had multiple overlaps (see Fig. 3). The analytical
aerial triangulation, based on 40 GPS determined ground control
points, included selfcalibration with 12 parameters. The theoretical
accuracy of the resulting coordinates of the perspective photo-
centres is about 12 cm horizontally and 8 cm vertically. It should be
kept in mind, however, that systematic errors are to be expected in
the same order of magnitude, at least. The block-adjustment referred
directly to the national Gauss-Krüger coordinate system.
The coordinate differences between the photogrammetrically
determined camera air stations and their GPS equivalents were
calculated for each of the 67 camera air stations. The further
comparisons were all based on the arithmetic means of the
differences per strip, composed of 7 resp. 5 air stations, the accuracy
of the individual GPS positions being not the goal of the
investigation. The photogrammetric error part in the mean
differences therefore is expected to be in the order of 5 cm for the
random components. The systematic photogrammetric errors,
however, may still be in the order of 10 to 20 cm. This is to be kept
in mind, as we deal here with differences of absolute errors.
3.2. Comparison
The mean differences per strip between photogrammetric and GPS
positioning of the camera air stations (reduced to the respective GPS
antenna positions) are collected in Table 1. The figures all concern
GPS antenna 1 and refer to the national Gauss-Krüger coordinate
system: y = R = E; x = H = N; z = h. The table also summarizes the
overall arithmetic means for all strips (mean values taken over all
ground stations) and the arithmetic means for all ground stations
(mean values taken over all strips).
It is somewhat difficult to directly assess and interpret the detailed
contents of Table 1 as the coordinate differences refer to different
flight directions. It is obvious, however, that there are clear
systematic error effects which alternate with the flight direction,
whilst error effects related to the GPS ground stations seem not to be
predominant. Also, a constant difference in z of considerable
magnitude (40 cm) is evident. In order to separate potential error
effects, for further evaluation, the values of Table 1 have been re-
classified with regard to a reference system fixed to the airplane: L
(in flight direction), C (perpendicular to the flight direction, + to the
right), V (vertical = z).
Now, the results look considerably more consistent. Especially the
mean differences in L and C (in flight direction and perpendicular to
it), taken of all photo-strips per ground station, show practically no
dependency on the distance to the ground stations at all. Those mean
differences are listed in Table 2 and plotted in Fig. 6. It can be seen
that the coordinate differences between photogrammetrically and
GPS-determined air stations have in first instance constant shifts
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
Differences [cm]
F