2.7.6 Tile Matching
Feature matching is generally not performed
over the whole image, but rather for tiles
within the image. Tiles are used because a low
order transformation cannot be extended over a
whole SPOT scene without the introduction of
unacceptable errors, during the matching
process,
Large images are split into tiles of
approximately 500 by 500 pixels. Matching
will occur within these tiles. In practice only
the first image of the image pair is tiled
because points within a tile in the first image
can be matched to points in several tiles in the
second image.
A geometric transformation is calculated for
each tile, and these must be appropriately
propagated from one level of the pyramid to the
next.
When matching has been completed for a tile, a
tile from the first image is cross correlated
with its corresponding area in the second
image, based on the most recently defined
image transformation. Again resampling will
occur if rotation or scale differences require
this. If the cross correlation is less than an
operator specified threshold, then the
transformation for the tile is rejected. This
tile is then frozen and no more processing is
performed on the tile at any level of the
pyramid.
2.8 Image Based Intensity Matching
Intensity matching is performed only at the
bottom of the pyramid, rather than at every
level of the pyramid. Intensity matching is a
final check on the validity of each conjugate
point pair, either accepting or rejecting the
pair, based on considering the grey level values
of pixels around each point of the conjugate
point pair (Ackermann 1984).
Given a conjugate point pair an image chip is
considered around the points in each image.
These two chips may differ due to radiometric
and geometric inconsistencies. A
transformation is sought to take into account
these elements. Starting with approximate
values for the unknown radiometric and
geometric coefficients a least squares solution
is found for the transformation between the
two windows. The initial coefficients are
updated after the first iteration and the second
image chip is resampled based on the geometric
coefficients. The procedure is iterated till
convergence is achieved. If convergence is not
achieved after some iterations then the
conjugate point pair is rejected.
At the end of this procedure a trimmed down
set of conjugate points can be XPECTed.
2.9 Transformation Calculation and
Resampling
Procedures exist to allow the calculation of
geometric transformations from a set of tie
points. These are usually applied after the
intensity matching. Based on a geometric
transformation a SPOT image can be resampled,
affecting the co-registration of two images.
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996
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