In: Wagner W., Szekely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
335
Figure 2. Results of the radargrammetric stereo processing for
the summer acquisitions (A) and autumn acquisitions (B)
Furthermore, the acquisitions acquired with an incidence angle
of more than 56° were not used for DSM calculation due to
strong ambiguities in the images.
The visual inspection of the test results achieved with different
disparity angle settings showed the following:
• DSMs calculated with stereo pairs with a small
disparity angle (9°) show strong artifacts and noise.
• The artifacts and noise reduces with an increasing
disparity angle.
• The results achieved with a disparity angle of -20°
showed visually the best results.
• Areas with invalids caused by layover and shadow
artifacts (no matching possible) increase with a larger
disparity angle.
Scenario
LE 90
[m]
No
Points
Mean
Ascending summer (20°), raw
5.8
634
-2.4
Descending summer (20°), raw
6.4
634
-2.0
Descending October (20°), raw
6.7
473
-1.9
Ascending October (9°), raw
16.2
458
-4.2
Ascending October (11°), raw
8.9
453
-2.9
Ascending October (20°), raw
6.5
452
-2.6
Asc / Desc Oct. (20°), raw
5.1
616
-2.2
Asc / Desc Oct. (20°) edited
4.7
616
-2.2
Asc / Desc Oct. (20°) edited (cal.)
3.1
616
-0.2
Table 1. Statistical analysis for test scenarios using different
orbit directions and disparity angles (raw = unedited DSM, cal.
= calibrated)
In a next step, the statistical analysis was performed. The
distribution of the DGPS points in combination with the
evaluation result for the DSM calculated for the October scenes
(disparity angle -20°, combination of ascending and descending
orbit) is depicted in Figure 3. Table 1 shows the statistical
analysis for some representative test results.
In contrast to the visual impression, the statistical analysis show
better results for the DSM calculated with the summer
acquisitions compared to the DSM of the October acquisitions.
A reason might be that the reference points were acquired in
parallel to the summer acquisitions.
However, the statistics confirm that the quality improves with a
larger disparity angle. The accuracy could further be improved
by combining of ascending and descending orbit direction,
which also reduces the number of invalid pixels. Moreover, the
editing (smoothing, outlier removal) improves the visual
impression and the statistical result. In a last step, the DSM was
calibrated, improving the statistical results even more.
Difference
Meter
» -19,464--9,753
» -9,752--4,309
° -4,308 - -2,574
•> -2.573--0.951
° -0,950- 1,307
» 1.308-4,650
• 4.651-9,310
• 9,311-17.630
Figure 3. Evaluation result for the DSM (based on October
scenes, disparity angle -20°, combination of ascending and
descending orbit)
2.3.3 Orthorectification: Based on the edited DSM from the
October acquisitions, an orthorectification of the TerraSAR-X
images was performed with Infoterra’s in-house
orthorectification processor. For a part of the test site street
vector data was available. The overlay of the street vectors and
the orthorectified images showed a very good match of 1 to 2
pixels (2.5 meter spacing).
In the frame of the research project, the DSM and the
orthorectified TerraSAR-X images were provided to RapidEye
AG, where both data sets were used for co-registration and
orthorectification of RapidEye data. The achieved geo-location