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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004
The first requirement can be met by releasing the shutters of the
individual DMC camera heads with a precision of less than 0.01
msec. This ensures that we can assume all eight images of one
exposure instant to be taken synchronously and from the same
location. Thus, we do not need to model the influences of
different TDI shifts or to model the projection centre
coordinates as a function of time.
Due to the slightly different location of the projection centres of
the individual camera heads, the generation of the central
perspective image composites involves a systematic
displacement of all pixels. In theory, this step requires the exact
knowledge of the height of each point on the ground. Since
such information is not generally available, the horizontal
reference plane is used as an approximation instead. Thus, there
is a residual relief displacement effect for all areas which do not
exactly lie in this plane. The size of the relief displacement
depends on the height variation in object space relative to the
flying height above the ground. To this end, an investigation
(Tang et al. 2000) was carried out which showed that the
resulting error in the central perspective image composite could
be neglected, even for very high accuracy requirements if the
height variation is not extreme. The results of this investigation
are shown in Figure 5.
As a mechanical part inside an aircraft can never be constructed
to be absolutely stable over short and long time periods, the
camera mount for the DMC was designed to allow for angular
deformations. This leads to a further assumption for our
platform calibration model. Based on tie points determined
automatically in the overlapping areas, we use a separate bundle
adjustment for each imaging instant to compute the parameters
of relative orientation between the individual camera heads.
Since we only assume angular movements based on the
mechanical design, we overcome the problem of high
correlation between the unknowns to be estimated by solving
only for the angular parameters.
A typical accuracy for the tie point coordinates after the bundle
adjustment is in the order of 1 or 2 pm, corresponding to 1/6 to
1/12 of a pixel having a size of 12um. Our experience has
shown that automatically determining tie points in this case
does not pose a problem. Because of synchronous imaging,
moving objects like cars and waves can also be used as tie
points. As an example, the residuals of an arbitrary computation
are shown in Figure 6. It should be noted that, in order to
reliably compute the orientation parameters, a much coarser
distribution of about 30 to 50 points is also enough.
It is an interesting question how stable the camera configuration
actually is, and thus an internal bundle adjustment often needs
to be carried out to ensure an accurate generation of the image
composites. We have investigated several DMC flights and
have found only very small and random variations in the
parameter values. Nevertheless, to be on the safe side, we
currently recommend checking the stability of the camera head
configuration at every exposure, since matching and parameter
computation is very fast and thus negligible in terms of the
overall computing time.
0,5
pixel
DY|(Ah / hg =0.2)
025 DY (^h / hg z0.1)
DX (Ah 702)
DX (^h/ hg 70.1)
500 1000 2000 3000 4000m
flying height above ground. ——»
Figure 5. Influence of the projection centre offset on the image
composite as a function of the height differences (Ah) in the
imaged area to the flying height above ground (hg)
— 2 0 microns
Figure 6. Example of the residuals of the internal bundie
orientation, oy = 0.82um based on 999 observations
4. DMC IN PRACTCAL APPLICATIONS — RESULTS
AND REACTIONS FROM USERS
Because the DMC has been on the market for a number of
years, there have been various reports about the accuracy of a
DMC test flight and about the practical use of the DMC and its
advantages over film images. As far as accuracy is concerned,
we only give one example here and refer the interested reader to
other publications for in-depth studies (Dórstel 2003).
4.1 Short discussion of DMC accuracy potential
The one example we mention here deals with imagery taken
over Z/I Imaging's test field in Elchingen, Germany at a scale
of approximately 1:13.000 and a flying height of 1500 m above
ground. Thus, the pixel size of 12um corresponds to about 0.13
m on the ground. Three overlapping strips were flown in an
east-west direction, and another three in a north-south direction,
providing a very stable block of about 20 images with 60% end
and 60% side overlap.
Tie-point coordinates were determined automatically using
ISAT (Madani, et al, 2001) image coordinates of some GCPs,
and a number of check points were measured manually. In the
subsequent bundle adjustment, object coordinates for the check
points were computed. The resulting standard deviation o, of
the image coordinates amounted to 1.7 um or 0.14 pixels. A
comparison with known values yielded an empirical standard
deviation of 0.036 m in planimetry and 0.06 m in height.
In comparison, film cameras regularly deliver a os of
approximately 5 um. At the given scale of 1:13.000, this