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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004
eo Image Acquisition: handles the exposure
synchronization and control, image acquisition
and storage.
e Synchronization: creates the temporal reference
frame coherently transferable to all sensors.
e Power and Environment Control: guarantees
power supply and stabilizes the operational
environment conditions for all the sensors.
Apart from the subsystems installed on the vehicle that run
during data (orientation, synchronization, image and laser
ranging) acquisition, the GEOMOBIL system is made up of a
sensor calibration procedure and data extraction software.
2.1 Orientation subsystem
The orientation subsystem is responsible for georeferencing the
photographs taken by the GEOMOBIL. Thus, it provides the
coordinates (position) and the angles (attitude) of their
projection centers. This subsystem is based on an Applanix
system, which is specially designed for land vehicle
applications and is integrated in the GEOMOBIL. This system
is basically composed of:
e An IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit), a sensor
that provides measurements of accelerations and
angular velocities.
e Two sets of GPS antenna-receivers, one of double
frequency to provide observations of the position
and velocity, and the other one of single
frequency to improve the heading angle
determination. This system is called GAMS (GPS
Azimuth Measurement System). )
oe A DMI (Distance Measurement Indicator), a
sensor directly installed on one of the vehicle’s
rear wheels which provides information of the
distance traveled.
e APOS Computer System, which contains the
core of the system, IMU and DMI interfaces, two
GPS receivers and a removable PC-card disk
drive where data is stored.
e A POSPac, software for processing GPS data and
integrating the GPS solution with the
observations of the other sensors.
Like any system that combines inertial and GPS observations at
a high level of integration, GPS derived trajectories are used to
correct and calibrate the drifts of IMU gyros and accelerometers
so that the position and velocity errors derived from inertial
sensors are minimized. However, the main drawbacks for
terrestrial navigation are the presence of obstacles on the road,
like bridges or tunnels, which interrupt totally or partially the
acquisition of GPS observations during some time interval, and
the existence of areas where most of the GPS satellites signals
are blocked by terrain conditions, like urban areas with high
buildings, forest zones, etc. In these areas without GPS
coverage or with a very poor constellation, position and
velocity are calculated from IMU observations, whose errors
only depend on the distance traveled since during the GPS
signal outage DMI observations are used.
In order to obtain the position and attitude of photographs from
the position and angles provided by the orientation subsystem,
it is important to fix the relation between all the reference
frames of the orientation process. For this reason, the
relationship between the IMU, cameras and GPS must be totally
stable.
2.2 Integration Platform
The integration platform is the structure where the different
sensors are mounted for their operation. This platform must be
sufficiently stable for the precise transference of reference
frames. Two basic requirements must be considered, namely
that the platform must have a maximum physical space at the
top of the van, and the geometry of the platform must be totally
stable in order to transfer the global reference frame (computed
from the GPS/IMU data) to any sensor installed on the
platform. This implies high immunity to deformations. The
design of the platform was studied [3] and several options were
analyzed. The optimal solution is based on an irregular mesh
system with diagonal reinforcements, as can be seen in figure 2.
This structure is equipped with equidistant anchorage points so
that different sensors can be easily distributed.
Figure 2: Integration Platform simulation with the diagonal
reinforcements.
As explained above, the biggest constraint in the design of the
platform and the anchorage system for the sensors has been the
stability requirements. The maximum deformations tolerated
between the reference center of the absolute frame (IMU) and
the reference center of the relative frame (Camera) are 1mm in
displacement and 70 arc seconds in rotation.
2.3 Image sensor subsystem
The subsystem design has been driven by two main
requirements: to acquire images of at least 1Mpix and to get
10m stereoscopic overlap at a 10 m distance from the van
(about 100 m?). The selected image size is a compromise
between image resolution and data storage and management.
The stereo overlap requirement is conditioned by two factors:
getting the maximum stereoscopic overlap free of obstacles
(between the vehicle and the objects of interest) and preserving
a B/D ratio (stereoscopic base — object distance) as good as
possible (see figure 3). Table 1 summarizes the image sensor
subsystem characteristics.
No. Píxels 1024x1024
Pixel size 12 um
Focal length 10.2 mm
FOV 62.13?
IFOV 3 min. 38 sec.
Stereoscopic overlap @10 m 10:55 m
Precision@10 m (across-track) 0.8 cm
Precision@10 m (along-track) 5:6 cm
Table 1: technical features of on-board image sensors.
Figure 3 shows some significant photogrammetric figures.
Notice the dependency of the along-track photogrammetric