In addition to the soil
disturbance depicted by Figure
10, other features which could
benefit from the effect would
be rock outcrops, stressed
vegetation, and terrain as
rendered in urban areas.
Possibly the most advantageous
feature of the negative type
2443 product is in its use as a
conventional negative product
in electronic dodging contact
printers. Autododge can be
controlled, hence more uniform
printing can be achieved,
consequently products such as
mosaics can be produced with
better tonal uniformity.
In small scale applications the
2443 emulsion (positive or
negative) is definitely the
choice film if color is
required. Its infrared
sensitivity will provide the
haze penetration which is often
required at higher altitudes.
As a final note on graininess
and sharpness of the imagery,
it does not seem that it is
significantly affected by the
negative process (Figure 11),
although a more quantitative
analysis is needed to
substantiate this observation.
IMAGE ACQUISITION TECHNIQUES
Innovation in acquiring aerial
photographic imagery has
concentrated in two areas:
image contrast control and
image motion compensation.
Contrast control awareness in
Canada has evolved primarily as
a response to federal
requirements on aerial
photography, while image motion
compensation has been a
technological implementation of
major aerial camera
manufacturers.
Image Contrast Control
Contrast control has been
widely used as a tool in
photography almost since its
inception; the popularization
of the Zone System [28] is an
attestation to this. In aerial
photography the operational
concept of controlling contrast
is a relatively recent event.
Two reasons account for this
situation: one, older versions
of photographic specifications
required constant processing
(analogous to no contrast
control), two, methods to
determine terrain brightness
range were either nonexistent
or experimental [29]. The
revision of the
Interdepartmental Committee on
Aerial Surveys specifications,
specifically item #27, imply
that the air photo firm utilize
techniques to control the film
contrast in order to achieve
the aim density range of 1. 0
[5]. The modification of
exposure through obtaining film
speeds associated with varying
average gradients and the
processing of film to the
different average gradients is
now generally recognized [30-
32]. Users have seen these
techniques translated into
better overall tonal ranges,
more consistent detailed
information in shadow areas,
and better overall quality in
aerial photography product. The
problem of determining terrain
brightness range,
unfortunately, is still
generally a subjective
evaluation and is likely the
reason not all aerial firms
follow the ICAS exposure
processing guidelines. Although
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