The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
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D.
Works of art
E.
Sidewalks
F.
Road signs
G.
Manholes
H.
Traffic lights
I.
Trees
J.
Garages
K.
Private accesses
L.
Electric lines
M.
Generic Service Lines
N.
All not specified but helpful to the representation
of the territory
The time limit for the end of survey operation was not grater
than 30 working days. For this reason the Project Group has
moved from
the starting idea of a classic survey to the
possibility to
use a Mobile Mapping System.
2. SURVEY EQUIPEMENT AND METHODOLOGY
2.1 Road-Scanner system
“Road-Scanner” is a MMS (Mobile Mapping System) vehicle
equipped with many different sensors able to perform very high
detailed survey along the trajectory that the vehicle is moving.
The Road-Scanner system was realized, at the beginning for the
implementation of road inventory, in agreement with the Italian
law (Italian D.M. 1 June 2001) but can also be employed in all
the applications that require high detailed survey with quite
good accuracy (decimeter level accuracy).
In detail the Road-Scanner is equipped with 2GPS+INS sensors
for navigation (Applanix POSLV 220 System), four digital
cameras (Imaging Source) for close range photogrammetric
survey, a Laser scanner (FARO LS880), a OMNISTAR
receiver (Trimble AG332) and a Road surface profiler (this
sensor was not used for the underground survey since not
requested).
This system allows achieving a full inspection of all the
infrastructure components by acquiring automatically several
data sets like:
1. Vehicle route
2. Longitudinal profile
3. Pavement roughness (IRI - International Roughness Index)
4. Geo-referenced images at a 1-4 meter step
5. Geo-referenced laser point clouds
Figure 2. Road-Scanner System
All the data sets are geo-referenced by means of the powerful
Applanix POS-LV positioning system. Thanks to that, they are
all related and can be accessed and edited with the post
processing application. The Figure 2 and 3 shows the Road-
Scanner system and an example of a geo-referenced laser points
cloud.
The Applanix system combines GPS sensors and IMU using a
Kalman filter and permits for every epoch to give position and
orientation of the vehicle. The photogrammetric unit and the
Laser Scanning determine the position of the surveyed points in
a reference frame rigidly connected to the body of the vehicle
time by time.
P ■■—uà
Os#»« t fc. * * « » ** * . . ’ if #*<*•«
Figure 3. Geo-referenced laser points cloud
So, in theory, is it possible to define a transformation matrix
that permits the determination of the position of both the
typology of instrument (and hence the position of the surveyed
points) in the reference frame defined by the Applanix system.
2.2 Sensors specification
The Table 1. shows the sensor specifications as reported by the
producers:
Sensors
Specification
Laser Scanner:
FARO LS880
At 25m 3mm
Navigation System
POSLV220
60 sec GPS outage
XY position
15mm
Z position
20mm
Roll & Pitch
0.06°
True heading
0.03°
Table 1. Some sensor specifications
The values reported, concerning the POS LV 220 System, are
referred to a 60-second of complete GPS signal outage. When
the GPS signal is available the precision corresponds to the
kinematic post-processed approach when the fixed solution is
available (typically 2-5 cm).