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considerations which have to be kept in mind: (1) A photo-block
which refers entirely and in absolute terms on orientation sensor
data has reliability zero. The orientation data reference cannot be
checked at all, the resulting system relies on them absolutely. (2)
As soon as a system depends on absolute data then also all other
circumstances must meet absolute requirements. It means that all
systematic errors (interior photo-orientation, camera-GPS
synchronisation etc.) must be under absolute control and must be
relied upon. This is quite a difference against conventional
photogrammetry, the good results of which are only obtained
because many errors are compensated or neutralized by certain
degrees of freedom. (3) If aerial triangulation proper is abandoned
some local homogenisation might still be applied.
3. ACCURACY REQUIREMENTS FOR ORIENTATION
DATA
The above considerations mainly referred to the principal
importance and application of orientation sensor data in relation
with other imaging or non imaging sensors. It remains to consider
the required accuracy. There is no general answer to that question.
The accuracy requirements which orientation data shoud meet
depend very much on the sensor combination and the envisaged
application.
Possibly the highest requirements are set by high precision
photogrammetric application, in terms of aerial triangulation.
Conventional high precision aerial triangulation, at any scale,
achieves attitude accuracies for the images in the order of 3 resp. 5
or 6 mgon (for K resp. À and ()) or about 0.05 - 0.1 mrad. It is said
that (expensive) INS systems can achieve such accuracy results,
required with regard to absolute reference, but applications in aerial
photogrammetry are not known. Attitude accuracies in the order of
2 - 0.2 mrad are easier to obtain. They are quite useful for
strengthening combined aerial triangulation, and can suffice
directly for the photo- or orthophoto-rectification. Also, they can
provide initial approximations for other purposes (like automatic
aerial triangulation).
The requirements for GPS camera positioning depend on the
photo-scale. Large scale aerial triangulation reaches standard errors
of perspective centres of a bout 3 -4 cm. That would require GPS
coordinate precision of 5 cm, or better (not in terms of absolute
accuracy but of internal consistency only). The extension of such
blocks is usually « 10 km. For smaller photo-scales the GPS
precision requirements drop to more convenient magnitudes of 10 -
20 cm, and can go to 0.5 m or more for medium and small scale
topographic mapping. It can be said that the performance of
kinematic GPS positioning is sufficient for application within the
full range of photogrammetric photo-scales. If, however, the GPS
positioning is to be absolute, then all systematic errors (GPS and
images) must be kept to the same order of magnitude, which is a
completely new situation for photogrammetry.
The laser scanning systems on the other hand depend practically
in absolute terms on the positioning and attitude data provided by
GPS and INS. The requirements can be specified in general to be
about 10 cm (or better) for positioning, and 0.1 mrad in attitude.
Combined system calibration is essential.
In the field of remote sensing the multi-spectral scanners also
depend entirely on position and attitude data, unless merged in
conventional ways with maps or previous scenes. The
requirements are usually not as high as in photgogrammetry
proper, as precise geometry is often secondary. The direct and
accurate orientation of such imagery has given airborne remote
sensing a great push, in terms of extended applications and much
greater practical convenience. A special case is radar imagery
9
(SAR). Here again the dependency on orientation data is direct.
And high accuracy INS systems, combined with kinematic GPS
positioning, mark the performance.
In general, the application of GPS positioning and attitude
determination by INS in combination with various airborne
imaging or non-imaging sensors has given all aerial information
technology a great impetus. The potential of application has been
greatly widened and the conditions of application have become
much easier and more economic. Of vital importance is the fact
that the orientation data are obtained digitally for direct computer
processing. The implications have just started to be realized. It is a
great challenge for the near future to exploit the potential of multi-
sensor systems.
As a last remark it is mentioned that the availability and the
performance of the orientation sensors also have successfully
widened applications in fields which previously have not been open
to airborne methods, but which quickly gain importance. Examples
are helicopters or low flying light aircraft, equipped with various
also non-imaging sensors for sensing environmental pollution
under and on the ground or in the air. For such applications the
direct and documented positioning is essential.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996