IF(k) | 2 is the power spectrum of f(x) as obtained from the discrete
Fourier transform given n = L/ Ax values of f(x); the discrete power
spectrum or the amplitude spectrum !F(k)! is defined at frequencies
Y= k/L, if the profile has a record length L.
The transfer function expresses the m.s.e. of the curve which is ob-
tained by ES of a single sinusoid p.sin(27V x + ¢) and subsequent
interpolation:
2
.P- 9e
Hu) L-——.
Gn P
; u = vAX
An ideal reconstruction of the sinewave means € = 0, thus H = 1, i.e.,
100% fidelity. The phase angle ¢ does not influence the r.m.s.e. € if
the record length L of the sinusoid is sufficiently long, i.e., if nd x
is equal to an integer multiple of the period length A = 1/v, and if
A is not smaller than 24x.
Knowing what the result is of sampling and interpolation of a sinusoid
allows deduction of the response of the system to a linear combination
of sinusoids. If a profile f(x) can be represented by a superimposition
of sinusoids (Fourier series) with Ai » 2 Ax, then the power spectrum
carries the necessary information about f(x), i.e., amplitudes versus
frequency, to compute the mean square error of its digital model.
Since terrain profiles, in general, can be only approximated by a finite
Fourier series, the above formula for Og provides only an estimate. By
applying some simple corrections to the raw estimate as calculated from
transfer function and power spectrum (also including, for example, the
influence of the spectrum computation from a sample corrupted by a ran-
dom measuring error) /2/, estimates were obtained which, for the cases
examined to date, did not deviate from the actual r.m.s.e. by more than
5%. The approach is also attractive from the point of practical
application: there are no check measurements required, the discrete
spectrum can be computed by the Fast Fourier Transform which is a stan-
dard algorithm, and the transfer function can be calculated by using the
DEM interpolation program with a sinusoid as input which is sampled at
fixed intervals. The transfer function of a particular interpolation
method has to be computed only once and can be retrieved later from a
library for every new task of accuracy estimation.
3. PROGRESSIVE SAMPLING
PS, as conceived by Makarovic /5/, starts with the zero-sampling-run,
where elevation is measured at the intersection points of a regular
grid. Subsequently, the second differences of the measured values are
analyzed along the x- and the y-grid lines. Finer sampling should be
done only in those areas where the second difference exceeds a pre-
specified threshold (see figure la).
= 655"