24 ANALYTICAL AERIAL TRIANGULATION, DISCUSSION
the additional measurement of the length of any
one ray in each of the bundles. (Heavy lines
refer to the center, thin lines to the edge position
or the strip.) In other words, a differential scale
determination is carried out at each station.
Such a method has been introduced in conven-
tional aerial triangulation with the execution of
ARP-measurements. The results indexed by
mo /
my[ml -K uM 107° /
100| mytmi-K,u M10?
mylmi -Kz uM: 1079 v
u=-mean square error of unit weight
$04 in microns
M H (scalefactor)
80 |
70]
60 |
50
40]
30
20]
5 7 9 " 13 15 17 19 21 23
No of photographs in the strip
Fig. 7
*h" show that the scale along the strip (X;) is
decidedly improved, but at the same time it is
seen that only an insignificant improvement on
both the Y- and Z-coordinates is obtained.
If both types of auxiliary data, namely dif-
ferential scaling and celestial orientation are
introduced, the laws of error propagation can be
decidedly improved for all three coordinates.
Such a result is shown in Fig. 7 where the cor-
responding curves are indexed by "st h^".
Prof P. WisER: Je remercie vivement Mon-
sieur Schmid pour cette trés intéressante inter-
vention. Il est vraiment fort regrettable que le
temps nous soit tellement compté, mais trois
orateurs sont encore inscrits au débat. Je vais
donc passer la parole à Monsieur Inghilleri. On
m'a informé que Monsieur Solaini, orateur in-
scrit ensuite, ne prendra pas la parole en ce
moment, et par conséquent Monsieur Inghilleri
aura à sa disposition le temps destiné primitive-
ment à Monsieur Solaini.
Mr G. INGHILLERI: In Mr Schut's paper it is
not mentioned at all the method studied and
chosen by the Institute of Geodesy and Photo-
grammetry in Milan, most probably because at
the time when the aforesaid report was issued
only a short publication had appeared in the
Lincei Academy magazine and a technical paper
in the ASTIA bulletin.
The above-mentioned method is a typical
cantilever one: each photograph is orientated in
respect of the preceding one; since with very
small modifications of the computation pro-
gramme it is possible to orientate also the first
photographs of the strip in respect of the known
ground points, the relative orientation of each
photograph coincides with the absolute orienta-
tion. At the same time the model scaling is
determined by imposing that a direction passes
through a point of a known altitude.
The equations through which we can com-
pute the relative orientation are the Y-parallax
equations: if we use six points on each model we
may write six transcendental equations in the
unknown orientation parameters imposing the
parallaxes vanishing, and one more transcenden-
tal equation for the computation of b,. By
simple programme variations we can vary the
number of points considered in each model.
For the solution of the equations system we
use the parallel hyperplanes method; that is we
carry out the linearisation of the system and
introduce the approximate values of orientation
parameters; we then obtain the normal equa-
tions according to the proceeding of least
squares and we invert the matrix. At each itera-
tion a simple sum of products gives the correc-
tion to be added to the orientation parameters
until the values of the residuals are small
enough.
We must still mention a detail. The reference
system for the strip is a geodetic line connecting
one point in the first model with a point in the
last one; the co-ordinates of the strip points that
we compute are rectangular geodetical co-or-
dinates which refer to the above-mentioned
geodetic line.
Of course, the computations relative to each
photograph are referred to a rectangular system,
but after bridging this system rotates and trans-
lates so that the X-axis will be tangent to the
reference geodetic line in a suitable point and
the Z-axis will be parallel to the vertical through
that same point. This point is taken on the
geodetic line and is always very near to the
nadiral point of the preceding photograph. With
the use of the variable reference system we can
automatically solve the problems of the earth
curvature since with very simple formulae we
can obtain the true height of the points and well
defi
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