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PERFORMANCE OF REDUCED AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS IN THE MPS-2
M.H. ELFICK
Department of Civil Engineering and Surveying
The University of Newcastle, N.S.W., 2308, Australia
and
G. FUCHS
Central Mapping Authority
BATHURST., N.S.W., 2795, Australia
Commission Number: 1-V
ABSTRACT
Aerial photographs from a Wild RC-10 camera were reduced by
rephotographing the negatives using a Hassablad camera with a copying
lens. The lens distortion of the final photography was examined, and the
accuracy of point determination measured, and compared with results from
measurements taken from the original large format photography by the same
operator using a Kern PG-2 analogue stereoplotter. The results indicate
that reduced aerial photography can be used for many mapping applications,
provided that the photographic reduction is performed carefully using a
suitable lens, and high resolution film. The subsequent measurements then
have to be made with a precision analytical instrument with suitabie
magnification.
1.0 INTRODUCTION
The limitations inherent in mechanical analogue stereoplotters have
greatly influenced the design of aerial survey cameras, and their lens
systems. It is difficult to build and maintain a mechanical system to
accurately transform from a perspective to an orthoginal projection since
all small errors and amounts of play in the mechanical linkages tend to
compound and affect the final accuracy. The probiem is reduced if the
scale of the photography is kept as large as possible, and hence the
development of large format cameras. In addition, radiai lens distortion
has to very small to reduce the difficulties in correcting this type of
image displacement on mechanical equipment.
The lens designer is then faced with the difficult task of providing a
lens system with a wide field of view and even light distribution over a
large format image and maintain low radial distortion characteristics.
The resultant lens systems tend to have a low resolving power and be of
small aperture. The small aperture then influences the film and shutter
speed and the final outcome is that most aerial cameras have a resolution
of less than 80 line pairs per millimetre on the negatives.
If reduced diapositives are made from large format negatives using a high
resolution film and a special copying lens, then very little data will be
lost in the printing process and the resultant stereopair when viewed
under suitable magnification should appear to the operator similar to that
viewed in an analogue instrument using large format diapositives.
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