SEEDS INDORE
EER Tae AE:
A total of 22 control points were deter-
mined with the help of a 1:500 survey of
the Palace carried out by the French Ar-
chaeological School of Athens several
years ago. À local co-ordinate system was
used and the determination of the control
points' plan co-ordinates was carried out
on a Calcomp 9100 digitizer with an esti-
mated uncertainty of + 20cm. Their
heights were subsequently estimated from
parallax measurements on the stereopair.
This determination was by no means ideal,
but it would not affect much the result-
ing accuracy of the height differences.
The camera was calibrated with a photo-
graphic calibration in an outdoor test
field according to the procedure
described in 2a and with the help of the
FullCal module. For the observations on
the photographs the Calcomp 9100
digitizer was used. The original nega-
tives were printed with four times enlar-
gement, in order to indirectly increase
the pointing accuracy of the digitizer.
These observations were carried out using
a mirror stereoscope simply set up over
the pair in order to ensure good point
recognition. Apart from the 22 control
points a further 1500 detail points were
observed and it turned out that no mis-
take occurred in point recognition.
Using the second module (PHOS) and 9 of
the 22 control points the exterior orien-
tation parameters of the two photos were
determined. The other 13 control points
were kept for checking the achieved accu-
racy. Their co-ordinates, along with
those of. the 1500 detail points, were
determined using simple photogrammetric
intersection provided by module PHOS. The
differences of the co-ordinates deter-
mined from the initial ones gave a strong
indication of the high accuracy and reli-
ability of the method used. In other
words the accuracy achieved was well wi-
thin the expected limits, considering the
quality.of .the _initial.co-ordinates._.In
Table 2 these results are summarised.
No of CP's |oX (m) oY (m) oZ (m)
xz 0.15 + 0.15 |: 6.43
0.28 £0.19 |+ 0.58
bp
w
I+
Table 2
Considering the conditions of the photo-
graphy and the quality of the control
points, these results are encouraging.
Further investigation into the improve-
ment of the accuracy is already underway.
The ground co-ordinates of the detail
points were stored into an ASCII file by
module PHOS along with the appropriate
codes for the automated restitution.
Using the AutoCAD restitution module the
plot was produced within the AutoCAD en-
vironment. Some editing was necessary in
order to rectify certain mistakes of the
digitizing stage. The final plot is pres-
ented in Figure 2. The time necessary for
each of the various stages to produce
this plot appear in Table 3.
Action Time (min)
Digitizer observations
(for 100 points) 30
Photogrammetric adjust-
ments — PHOS 15
Restitution - SURVEY 2
Editing — AutoCAD 30
Plotting 3
Table 3
4. CONCLUDING WORDS
The package described above does not
claim an award of originalitv. It is,
however, built. in. such a way to enable
modular use by the users. This means that
each of the described modules may be im-
plemented independently and irrespecti-
vely of the origin of the input data:
Thus the FullCal module may be used on
its own for the calibration of a camera.
The second module may be used for
resecting single photographs as well as
for determining spatial co-ordinates.
Finally the third module accepts ‚Input
from the previous one, but may well be
used with a compatible ASCII file pro-
duced in any other way (eg. classical
geodetic observations).
Furthermore, it is intended to be used
with any kind of camera, be it a metric
aerial survey camera or a phototheodo-
lite, or a semi-metric reseau camera or
even a non-metric camera. Thus its uses
are only limited by the user's imagi-
nation, as the package could be imple-
mented in cases of small aerial surveys
and in close range applications.
It is believed, that it provides an ideal
integration of the traditional pointwise
photogrammetric restitution with the pow-
erful editing facilities of today's stan-
dard CAD software, promoting at the same
time the idea of automation.
Finally, it is considered to be a posi-
tive solution to today's demands, which
are simplicity, ease of use, economy and
effectiveness. FotoCAD ensures quick pro-
ductivity for non-photogrammetrists, thus
making Photogrammetry available to them.
It could be stated that it is a decisive
contribution to a new concept approach
(Georgopoulos 1990), which will change
Photogrammetry as we have known it up to
now.