ACCURACY IN MULTILATED STIRHO-MODELS
by K A Chlin, cert. engineer,
Geographical Survey Office of Sweden.
le Introduction
In aerial photography for the purpose of stereo-plotting of areas with big surfaces of water, it often is
necessary to photograph extra photo-strips in order to obtain conventionally workable stereo-models. This
of course occasions increased expenses, even in plotting. If the coasts are steep and the vegetation dense,
stereo-plotting is also made more difficult. See [2].
In the following we shall
analyse a kind of orien-
tation which is different
from the traditional. 11 13 15
See fig l. Relative orien- + +
tation is assumed to be 91 95 d
carried out in six points. e
The points ll, 15, 31 and
55 are fixed with coordi- o O e— middle of >
nates 0/d, b/d, 0/0 and 31 33 35 photo strip
b/0. Points 91 and 95's b
\|/
coordinates are designat-
ed o/e and b/e, where e
is & variable.
The elevation control-
points are assumed to be Fig.1
situated in points 1l, 15, + point, where y-parallaxes are measured.
E > 2t
15, 71, 335 and 75. Points O elevation control point.
13 and 33 have coordinates
2/a and 2/o.
Further it is assumed that the aerial photography is done with a wide-angle camera (picture side: flying
elevation = 3:2). The pictures are supposed to be strictly vertical, the overlap 60 % and the country
comparatively flat. The pictures are assumed to be free from systematic errors,
2. Relative orientation
2.1. Theoretical derivation
The following correlation exists between the Y-parallaxes in the stereo-model and the corrections for the
orientation elements for dependent pairs of pictures, cf. [1]:
2
X. an EX. à Llu
+ h dbz, n d ÿ 2 +1 + 5 hd t 5 (1)
p --dby, - (x-b)d W
* h
nN
€
When the Y-parallaxes are measured in the previously mentioned points, the following systems of equations
are obtained: