108
choice of the projection distance. As the
depth of the test field increases, the correla-
tion between the principal distance and the
projection distance diminishes and the pre-
cision requirements become more severe.
This is of importance for close-range pho-
togrammetry because the depth of focus is
very narrow for imaging distances of 2—1 m
or less (see Figure 1). Consequently, the
depth extension of an object is severely
restricted and the accuracy requirements on
the parameters of inner orientation need not
be so high. Therefore it seems unrealistic to
demand special metric cameras for such
short imaging distances.
The computed tolerances are surprisingly
large for narrow-angle cameras whereas they
become very strict for wide-angle and super-
wide-angle cameras. The precision of the
principal distance should be on the order of
+ 0.1 mm for the Hasselblad camera with
Planar 1:3.5/100 (c = 100 mm, s = 27 x 27
mm) whereas the tolerance for a wide-angle
camera like the Zeiss TMK (c = 60 mm, s = 8
x 10 cm) gets reduced to + 25 jm for film (0,
+ 10 um). The corresponding values for glass
plates (o, + 3 um) are smaller by a factor of 3
and would be + 30 um for the Hasselblad and
+ 8 um for the TMK. Therefore, it should
be recommended that non-metric cameras
are mainly applied with narrow opening
angles and, consequently, long focal lengths.
The precision requirements for wide-angle
[um] T AH'
500
200
150
70
50
30
15
; =85#
-105£
;
Voo noo ET MA Var 82/2
Fic. 3. Tolerances for the mean square coor-
dinate error of the principal point according to a
simulated camera calibration. The measuring
precision in the picture has been assumed to be
To = € 10 um. ais the angle under which the test
field is seen from the camera.
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE SENSING, 1976
cameras are on the order of + 10 to + 30 um
for film and + 3 to + 10 um for plates. These
tolerances are very narrow and it seems
doubtful whether these values are always
met by metric cameras.
LENS DISTORTION
The principal distance and the location of
the principal point are liable to certain
changes from photograph to photograph.
These variations are caused by erroneous
positioning of the plate or film during expo-
sure. The lens distortion should not be influ-
enced by this effect. Nevertheless the lens
distortion determined by a camera calibra-
tion might show considerable differences
when the calibration procedure is repeated.
This is due mainly to a superposition of the
lens distortion with various other imaging
errors such as atmospheric refraction, film
shrinkage, or lack of flatness of the image
plane. In general the symmetrical lens dis-
tortion can be separated by a study of the
reproducibility. The precision of the distor-
tion curve should be at least of the same order
as the measuring precision.
An extension of the mathematical model
for affinity or for the tangential and asym-
metric lens distortion should not be neces-
sary for small- or medium-format cameras! 7.
The only exception would be for the princi-
pal point of symmetry, and it is advisable to
control its location in a camera calibration.
This point is defined only for lenses with a
noticeable distortion (more than + 5 to + 20
pm). The precision of this point determined
by a camera calibration varies from + 1 mm
[u m]T AC
500
300
200
=105#
1 AZ/Z
20 Yio V; Va a 7
Fic. 4. Tolerances for the principal distance.