International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004
Fig. 5 shows an ORIMA stereo point measurement interface
and graphical point and image display.
5 AUTOMATIC DTM EXTRACTION
Automatic generation of terrain models from overlapped
images is currently the most important way to collect a DTM.
The DTM extraction module in LPS concentrates on improving
the reliability, speed and productivity of the DTM extraction
process. In order to improve reliability and speed, an integrated
image matching strategy is developed. It includes a feature-
supported image correlation, geometric constraints, hierarchical
point search, on-the-fly resampling for rotation and distortion
compensation, consistency checking etc. For mproving speed
and productivity, the DTM module can generate DTM’s for all
overlapped pairs in the block with the option to automatically
mosaic them into a single optimized output. For further
flexibility, some easy-to-use graphical interface and tools are
developed, with which a user can manipulate their image pairs
and different interest areas such as excluding regions and
Strategy parameters very easily and efficiently. It supports
variety of input image formats and many output DTM types
such as TIN, raster DEM, ESRI 3D shapefile and ASCII.
Furthermore, The LPS DTM extraction module works for
[em
Figure 6a: Graphic overview of the block layout with
GCPs, check points and automatically collected tie points
Figure 6b: Automatically extracted DEM for the whole
block with grid size 1x1 meters without any editing
all aerial images, digital camera images, video camera images
and satellite images, which offers excellent economy for the
customers. Fig. 6 shows an example of a 28-image block used
in the OEEPE test. It covers an area of the town Forssa in
Southern Finland. The image scale is 1:4000 and flight height is
about 600 meters. The image overlap in strip is 60% and side
overlap varies from 24% to 49%. The film is positive color and
is scanned as black and white. The pixel size is 30 micrometers:
each scanned image has 8000x8000 pixels. There are 14 known
840
ground points available for the test. LPS APM works well using
the provided approximate coordinates of image photographic
center. It generates 437 object points with 1477 image points.
The triangulation computation includes automatic gross error
detection and 4 additional parameters. 8 of the 14 known
ground points are set to be GCP's and the remaining 6 are used
as check points. The root mean square error of 6 check points is
0.041, 0.054 and 0.055 meters for X, Y, Z respectively. The
Figure 6a shows the graphic display of the triangulation results.
It is the footprint of the block with ground point positions and
residual vectors. The triangle symbol represents GCP's, the
circle symbol represents check points, and the rectangle symbol
represents the automatically collected tie points. (Since the
residuals of GCP's and check points are very small, they are
difficult to see on the reduced graphic.) Considering the
realistic conditions of the block, the accuracy of the
triangulation results looks very reasonable. Figure 6b shows the
automatically extracted DEM for the whole 28 images with
ground cell size 1x1 meters. The whole automatic DEM
extraction computation takes less than 30 minutes for 28
images on an ordinary Pentium 4 with 2.4GHz Laptop PC.
Using 383 triangulated tie points (excluding the tie points
outside DEM boundary and on buildings and trees) as ground
check points, the automatic DEM has accuracy about 0.2
meters. The result shows the automatic DEM process is very
fast and accurate.
6 SUMMARY \
This paper has introduced a new digital photogrammetric
workstation, namely Leica Photogrammetry Suite™. Its main
functional modules and system workflow are described. The
features and algorithms for sensor modeling, automatic interior
orientation, automatic point measurement, block triangulation
and automatic DTM extraction of different kinds of images are
introduced. Several examples are demonstrated. It shows a
powerful, production oriented, process driven and easy to use
digital photogrammetric workstation is ready to use for both
advanced photogrammetrists and GIS professionals to
accurately and efficiently convert their geospatial imagery into
usable geospatial data.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND REFERNENCES
To be added.
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