IMAGE ORIENTATION EXCLUSIVELY BASED ON FREE-FORM TIE CURVES
Gerald Forkert
University of Technology Vienna, Institute of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
Gusshausstraße 27-29 / 122
A - 1040 Vienna, Austria
Tel.: +43 1 58801 3802
Fax: + 43 1 5056268
e-mail: gforkert@fbgeo1.tuwien.ac.at
Commission Ill, Working Group 2
KEY WORDS: orientation, reconstruction, bundle block adjustment, digital image, free-form curves
ABSTRACT
Recent developments in the field of digital image processing encourage to use line information for image orientation
and object reconstruction instead of or in addition to traditional methods based on distinct points. In this paper, image
orientation exclusively based on free-form tie curves shall be demonstrated working on a car as real-world test object.
Photographs were taken from around the car and scanned in order to obtain digital images. Edges extracted from
those digital images provided the input data for bundle block adjustment for the determination of both, the
orientational parameters of the images as well as the spatial shape of the tie curves. The results show, that an
accuracy in the order of the uncertainty of definition of the object lines could be achieved.
KURZFASSUNG
Die jüngsten Entwicklungen auf dem Gebiete der digitalen Bildverarbeitung legen die Verwertung von
Linieninformation für Bildorientierung und Objektrekonstruktion nahe, um traditionelle, auf Punkten basierende,
Methoden zu ergànzen oder sogar zu ersetzen. In diesem Beitrag soll mit Hilfe eines Autos als Testobjekt die
ausschlieBlich auf Freiform-Verknüpfungskurven basierende Bildorientierung demonstriert werden. Mehrere rund um
dieses Auto angeordnete Photos wurden gescannt, um digitale Bilder zu erhalten. Die von diesen digitalen Bildern
extrahierten Kanten dienten als Beobachtungsdaten für die Bündelblockausgleichung zur simultanen Bestimmung
sowohl der Bildorientierungen als auch der ráumlichen Form der Verknüpfungskurven. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, daß
eine Genauigkeit in der Größenordnung der Definitionsunsicherheit der Objektlinien erzielt werden konnte.
1. INTRODUCTION
One of the main tasks in photogrammetry is object
reconstruction. As a prerequisite the problems of image
orientation must be solved, which usually is done by
traditional photogrammetric algorithms based on object
points. Many objects can hardly be described by points
but by linear features. It is obvious to use that features
for image orientation and object reconstruction in
addition to point based methods.
Furthermore, line features may be very valuable for the
automated orientation of digital images: detecting
homologous lines in two or more images appears to be
easier in many cases than finding homologous points.
Several methods have been published which use line
features represented by a single polynomial (Kager
1980), what, however, is not sufficient for complex
object shapes. Spatial free form curves of joined cubic
polynomials seemed to be appropriate and have been
implemented into the bundle adjustment program
ORIENT (Kager 1989).
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B3. Vienna 199€
The basic concept of this method was presented in
1993 for the first time (Forkert 1993): The shape of a
joined cubic polynomial curve is completely described
by its node points. The positions of these nodes in
object space are determined by adjusting the curve
either to object points or to image rays of at least two
images.
Applying this method, the three basic problems of
object reconstruction can be solved using line features
only:
1) orientation of at least three images merely by free-
form tie curves using an arbitrarily chosen local
reference co-ordinate — system (alike relative
orientation),
2) absolute orientation based on free-form control
curves, and
3) reconstruction of free-form object curves from at
least two already oriented images.
Absolute orientation based on free-form control curves
was presented in 1994 using models from computer
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