The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
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Laser beam modulation lengths
1.2, 9.6 and 76.8 m
Points per second
120 000
Maximum distance
70 m
Linearity error at 10 m
3 mm
Vertical Field of View
320°
Horizontal Field of View
360°
Laser wavelength
785 nm
Laser power
22 mW
3. MEASUREMENTS
The target sled was moved along the barline in a straight line at
certain distance intervals, and distance measurements were
made to measurement targets with both instruments from
opposite directions. A steel measuring rod was used to guide the
sled along a straight line. The straight line on top of the bar was
measured and marked before the calibration by using the Leica
TCA2003 tacheometer.
Table 1. Technical data of Faro LS 880HE80 (Faro, 2005;
Lichti and Licht, 2006)
2.2 Reference equipment
The reference equipment used was Leica TCA2003 robot
tacheometer (S.No. 438743) (Figure 1 b), which can track the
motion of the prism. The distance measuring uncertainty is 1
mm + 1 ppm and the angle measuring accuracy is 0.15 mgon
(Leica, 2003). Regarding that information, the ranging accuracy
of the tacheometer was expected to be a degree better than that
FARO LS could produce, and could thus provide appropriate
reference for calibration
An ordinary Leica round prism (GPR1) was used as target in
the tacheometer measurements. TCA2003 uses phase
measurement of a modulated infrared laser beam in its range
determination algorithm. Tacheometer provides automatic
target recognition (ATR).
2.3 Other arrangements
The tested laserscanner Faro LS 880 HE80 was placed on a
platform at the end of the about 80 meters long barline
(Figure 4) and a reference equipment, a calibrated tacheometer
Leica TCA2003, was placed on the platform at the other end.
These instrument platforms were permanently mounted at both
ends of the barline.
In the calibration phase, the first range measurements were
made at a distance of about 1 m from the laser scanner. The
target sled was then moved with approximately 10 cm distance
intervals from the 1 m distance up to 5 m to reveal the
phenomena in the shortest 1.2 m modulation wavelength, and
also, due to the limited length of the steel rod guide, with
approximately 45 cm intervals for distances from 5 m up to
about 30 m from the scanner. The distances observed for the
first target location with both instruments were used as
reference distances d 0 ,L and d 0 j for the other measurements.
Figure 4. Measurement at a first distance about 1 m from the
laser scanner. The tubular level that was used for levelling the
sled is also shown in the image. Circles seen on the wall were
not used in this calibration.
Measurement targets for both instruments were placed on a
specially manufactured “target sled” seen in Figure 4. The sled
has levelling screws, and tribrach adapters were tightly attached
to the sled. Both measurement targets were attached to tribrachs
on the sled. The centers of the two tribrach adapters on the sled
were 14.9 cm apart.
The scanner target used for the calibration (see Figure 3 b) was
made of a 5 mm thick aluminum plate with a target pattern
printed on a piece of plain sticker paper. The target pattern had
triangular shapes pointing towards the target center to provide
reliable determination of the target center even at large
distances. The target center was approximated from the laser
data using the intensity image produced by the scanner.
Figure 3. (a) The calibration barline used in the measurements,
(b) Scanner target mounted on the prismholder.
The carrier sled and prisms were accurately levelled at the sled
location for the first distance using tubular levels. Subsequently,
at each distance step along the bar line, the sled was levelled
using a separate tubular level. Four single distance
measurements were taken for each distance with both the laser
scanner and tacheometer.
From the laser scanner data the target center was first
determined using the intensity image of the data provided by the
scanner, and then four closest distance recordings around the
target center were used as calibration observations. That would
result in a small uncertainty in relation to the exact target center
location as a function of the angular resolution used for the
scanning, but no significant effect to the distance (e.g ~1.5pm
range error at 30 m distance for 0.018° (0.3 mrad) angular
resolution).
The tacheometer provided directly horisontal distances between
its origin and the targeted prism. Measurements were made
either by using ATR or maximum signal of the prism was found
manually. A precision distance measuring mode was used and
four single measurements corrected for athmospheric effects
were made at each measured distance.
The mean of the four tacheometer and TLS measurements for
each target distance and distance differences for the
observations were calculated. For both instruments, the result
(mean value) of the measurements at the first distance was
subtracted from the results of the measurements for the rest of