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GEOMETRIC PRECISION OF SCANNED IMAGERY FOR PRODUCTION
PHOTOGRAMMETRY
Andrew Calarco*, Alex Dam? and A. Stewart Walker? '
“ Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC, 61 Inverness Drive East, Suite 200
; Englewood, CO 80112, USA
“ Leica Geosystems GIS & Mapping, LLC, 10840 Thornmint Road, Suite 100
San Diego, CA 92127, USA
(andy.calarco, alex.dam, stewart.walker)@gis.leica-geosystems.com
Commission I, WG I/2
KEY WORDS: Scanning, Digital, Film, Photogrammetry, Error, Precision, Workflow
ABSTRACT:
Little research has been performed to determine the quantitative effects of the geometric imprecision of scanned photographs in a
photogrammetric production setting. While photogrammetric scanners are most commonly used to scan aerial photographs, desktop
and graphic design scanners have also been applied. It is recognized that the precision of non-photogrammetric scanners is highly
variable and their errors larger than those of photogrammetric units, but these values have seldom been quantified. In addition, the
practical effect of these errors upon the photogrammetric solution has not received much study.
A precision calibration plate was repeatedly scanned on photogrammetric and non-photogrammetric scanners to determine the
variability and magnitude of errors. These errors were plotted spatially to illustrate the inherent instability of non-photogrammetric
scanners. These models of scan accuracy were then used to determine the effects of the random scan errors in a photogrammetric
production environment. While appropriate for qualitative uses, ultimately it was observed that the characteristic unpredictability of
the errors rendered this imagery unsuitable for quantitative applications.
During the investigation a significant degree of consistency was observed in the non-photogrammetric scanners, i.e. the errors,
though large, included a systematic component that did not vary through time and changing conditions. Therefore a small block was
scanned in such a scanner and the imagery re-sampled using the calibration parameters. The results were compared with those
obtained from the same block scanned in a photogrammetric scanner.
1 INTRODUCTION
With the introduction of airborne digital sensors, much
attention has shifted away from traditional means of image
capture. However, at this point only a very small percentage
of airborne imagery is collected from digital sensors with the
overwhelming majority of images being subjected to the
conventional softcopy methods of data processing. Images
are collected with a metric aerial camera, processed, and
converted to digital format on a film transparency scanner
for use in photogrammetric production.
The choice of film scanner is critical since any errors
introduced during scanning will be carried through the
photogrammetric workflow and can negatively influence the
results obtained during aerial triangulation, Digital Terrain
Model (DTM) extraction and registration of the rectified
imagery to existing datasets.
1] Justification of Study
A distinction should be made between photogrammetric
(PG) scanners and non-photogrammetric (NPG) scanners in
the market. PG scanners typically meet very robust
standards in terms of the optical alignment, throughput
capability and the accuracy of analog image conversion to
digital form. NPG scanners are available at a fraction of the
cost of PG units, and this has led to their periodic use in
photogrammetric production. While NPG scanners are
typically able to produce imagery of high radiometric
quality, uncertainty remains regarding the ability to
consistency produce digital imagery of high reliability.
There is no mechanism to calibrate the movement of the
scanner stage / sensor line and therefore no quantitative
values exist to the appropriateness of the imagery for
photogrammetric measurement.
The purpose of this paper is to explore and compare the
achievable precision of imagery scanned on PG and NPG
film scanners. Should the results show markedly different
results between the units tested, the quantification of
attainable precision may serve to preclude the use of NPG
scanners in photogrammetric work. In an effort to establish
the precision of both PG and NPG scanners, a fixed
methodology was established.
1.2 Research Design
There are three types of error: systematic, random and
egregious. Of the three, only the distinction between
systematic and random errors was focused upon.