International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B4, 2012
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia
Forest. Figure 1 shows study area and the amount of points used
in this assessment.
o 1 2 =
Figure 1: Study area location and points used in the assessment
1.3. Cartosat-1
Cartosat-1, also called IRS-P5, is an Indian satellite, launched
on May 5th, in 2005 and it presents the capability of acquiring
along track stereo images in panchromatic band. Its sensor
presents a spatial resolution of 2.5 meters and radiometric
resolution of 10 bits. Stereo pair is acquired in 2 different
angles: 26" (forward view) and 5? (afterward view), which
makes it possible to obtain a B/H ratio of 0.62.
2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
2.1. Field Survey
For this assessment it was necessary to determine coordinates
for 39 (thirty nine) points to be used in the geometric modeling
process and other points to be used in the accuracy evaluation.
All coordinates were determined in field trips using GNSS
single frequency (Ll) receivers, through static relative
positioning, registering data each 1 second during 30 minutes,
obtaining a minimum of 1,500 epochs, for a distance between
base and rover receivers not larger than 20 kilometers. All these
values are according to Brazilian Institute for Geography and
Statistics (IBGE) specifications. In this work comparison results
refers to the Brazilian standard specifications (PEC) for
classification of cartographic bases.
2.2. DEM and Orthoimage Generation
Cartosat-1 stereo pair (Path / Raw: 1814 / 0498) used in this
assessment was acquired in May 23 2009, with the orthokit
processing level, with RPCs (Rational Polynomial
Coefficients). Cartosat-1 DEM and orthoimage were generated
in PCI Geomatica Orthoengine 10.2, using RPCs. In order to
improve results it was also used 7 (seven) GCP (Ground
Control Points) and 8 (eight) Tie Points. The heights of Tie
Points were obtained using SRTM DEM. Final RMS was below
2.5 meters.
For DEM generation, data was resampled to 5 meters when
Epipolar Images were created and resampled again to 10 meters
during DEM generation. Orthoimage was generated with the
nominal spatial resolution of the raw data: 2.5 meters.
2.3. Planimetric Evaluation
The planimetric evaluation was done comparing coordinates of
30 (thirty) Checkpoints (not used on the DEM and orthoimage
generation process), which spatial distribution was presented in
figure 1, and its homologues on the orthoimage. Most of
Checkpoints were determined in intersections between roads or
streets (figure 2).
Check Point observed in the orthoirmage
Check Point or terrain
Figure 2: Example of a Check Point
Difference between coordinates (in the orthoimage and on
terrain) were calculated, obtaining the Euclidean distance which
was considered an error and the errors were analyzed
considering the specifications of PEC: at least 90% of the points
used in this evaluation should present errors smaller than values
presented in table 1.
2.3. Altimetric Evaluation
For this evaluation it was used 32 (Thirty two) Checkpoints,
which spatial distribution was presented in figure 1. Altimetry
evaluation was done comparing heights of the 32 Checkpoints
with the value obtained in the GNSS survey plus the difference
between ellipsoid and geoid in each point. Again results were
analyzed considering PEC specification, which limits for error
and standard deviation for altimetry are presented in table 2.
3. RESULTS
In General, results may be considered quite good and they are
according to results observed on evaluation of equivalent
sensors like PRISM (Barros ef al. 2009). Results are presented
separately, according to the kind of evaluation.
3.1. Planimetric Evaluation
Considering the errors estimated for the 30 points used in the
assessment, as well as the standard deviation observed (2.651
m), this orthoimage presents planimetric accuracy compatible
with the specified for class A of the scale 1:10,000, whose
tolerance is 8 meters and the standard deviation limit is 5
meters. We also calculated the Circular Error for 90% of the
points (CE90), obtaining 5.56 meters. Table 3 presents the
percentages of Checkpoints ^ presenting error till the limits
specified for each accuracy class for 1:10,000 scale.
Tolerance Checkpoint Percentage
Class (meters) Number (90)
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