Full text: Proceedings of the Symposium "From Analytical to Digital" (Part 1)

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The quoted results, which are accurate within 10 % and which 
can be extrapolated to other assumptions about the precision 
of navigation data, speak for themselves. It can be concluded, 
that high precision orientation data may be sufficient for 
small scale planimetric mapping. However, the requirements 
for vertical accuracy could only be met by very high preci- 
sion of orientation data, except for contour intervals of 
20 m or larger. 
5.4 Summarizing this preliminary simulation study it can be 
stated that high precision navigation data - after appropri- 
ate pre-processing - can be used directly for photo-mapping, 
omitting aerial triangulation altogether. Also the applica- 
tion for small scale mapping or thematic mapping may become 
feasible. The vertical accuracy requirements, however, re- 
main:critical. 
On the other hand it is obvious that aerial triangulation 
with auxiliary data will not be superseded easily. Therefore 
intermediate solutions, applying simplified blockadjustment 
procedures which would not require full point transfer, may 
become interesting. Also, additional sensors, like laser pro- 
filers, might further change the situation. It remains to be 
seen what precision level navigation systems will reach in 
near future. 
6. OUTLOOK ON SENSOR ORIENTATION 
It has been shown that the increasing accuracy performance 
of navigation systems will have great economic effects in 
photogrammetry, by making aerial triangulation practically 
independent of ground control and,eventually, by reducing 
aerial triangulation or making it obsolete altogether. There 
is, in addition, a third field in which readily available 
high precision orientation data may also have fundamental 
impact. It concerns the orientation of sensors such as mul- 
tispectral or other scanners, digital linear array cameras 
of the MOMS or stereo-MOMS type, and laser- or microwave 
terrain profilers. Such sensors are already applied for 
remote sensing purposes. But the distinction will be less 
sharp in future, as photogrammetry and remote sensing will 
move closer together. 
For obtaining geometrical accuracy the external orientation 
of such sensors is most essential. Evidently inflight measu- 
rement of external orientation data would be the most direct 
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