Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B3)

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
  
   
   
  
   
  
   
[he first 
th-based 
rface of 
on two 
is work 
histori- 
military 
this has 
nalogue 
nic and 
d into a 
' 1980s. 
ed from 
ened an 
tion of 
lite over 
art. 
10rmous 
multiple 
4 to 8 
)cessing 
moving 
over an 
led into 
onstruc- 
sensor. 
itioning 
low-cost 
0 stereo- 
gle pass 
mum of 
s Wings) 
an accu- 
€ major 
need to 
nterfero- 
xtended 
|o good 
1e direc- 
g deter- 
sensing 
at from 
iterest in 
atellites. 
ced for 
needed 
recisely 
> greatly 
ry from 
'chnique 
ocessing 
tain an 
een two 
RS-1 and 
r an area 
her than 
re globe 
ıbject to 
ollecting 
rom the 
satellite. The processes for repeat-pass interferometry 
are fairly straight-forward. As a result there are many 
centers of excellence that are capable of operating with 
this technique. The difficulties are in those areas where 
no useful information can be obtained. This may be in 
areas of image lay-over or image shadows, and it is in 
areas where the surface reflectivity is mirror-like (with 
very smooth surfaces, where no echoes are being sent 
back in the direction of the antenna) or where the 
coherence of the echoes is marginal or fully destroyed, 
which may be the case where excessive volume 
Scattering occurs. 
However, successful interferometry has been shown 
even in cases that only recently were considered to be 
highly risky. This includes mapping the surface of ice 
sheets and, by differtial interferometry or by ex- 
ploiting the geometric shape that may be known from 
other sources, the motion of ice sheets can be 
measured. 
The accuracies of repeat-pass interferometry from 
satellites can be defined by the elevation sensitivity 
of the radar system and that is in the range of £2 m, 
given an 12.5 m pixel. The accuracy itself is much 
lower and is a result of the uncertainities in the orbit 
and in the interferometric base vector. As a result one 
typically has accuracies reported in the range of £15 m 
Or SO. 
The best of all options would be a single-pass satellite 
interferometry system. This is being envisaged for a 
reflight of the Space Shuttle’s SIR-C sensor. The 
highest accuracy would be obtained if the uncertain- 
ities about the base vector could be eliminated. That is 
the case if two antennas are carried on one spacecraft. 
The idea of a SIR-C reflight on board of the Space 
Shuttle has been approved by NASA; the timing of the 
interferometric reflight to cover the entire globe with- 
in a few days by interferometric observation is still 
uncertain. 
7 USING RADAR IMAGE LAYOVER 
7.1 Layover 
An example of an very subtle and difficult element in 
radar surface reconstruction is the problem that from 
satellites the look-angle off-nadir is fairly small and 
ranges from 20° to 45°. As a result areas with high 
mountains where the elevation information is of 
greatest value are laid-over. Layover is an effect that 
occurs when the incidence angle is smaller than the 
slope. In steep terrain where mountain sides may have 
inclinations of 30° or more and rocks may be much 
steeper than that, layover in images is a frequent 
occurence. 
The images in the layover are useless. Interferometry is 
not applicable. Stereo-viewing is also marginal. As a 
result vast areas of the mountainous surface become 
non-observable from satellites, since they need to 
look with small incidence angles. 
7.2 Using the Layover to Define a Slope 
To overcome this problem one can develop techniques 
to automatically identify layover areas in radar 
images. This is possible when multiple images exist, 
425 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B3. Vienna 1996 
e.g. from stereo-coverage at different incidence angles. 
Layover areas are typically bright since they are facing 
the antenna. A feature that is laid-over is identifiable 
from stereo-coverage because it is wider in the steeper 
looking image than in the shallower looking one. A 
non-laid-over slope would manifest itself in the oppo- 
site manner. Knowing that a feature is laid-over in one 
image, namely the steeper one, leads now to two 
potential solutions for the slope, depending on 
whether the second image is laid-over as well. That 
cannot be decided unambigiously. An opposite-side 
view from an ascending orbit (if the stereo-views were 
from descending orbits) can help to resolve the 
ambiguity. Techniques to automatically employ lay- 
over to refine a topographic model of the terrain are 
currently being developed. A major application would 
be on planet Venus. However, also in highly moun- 
taineous terrain on Earth it might be applicable to 
ERS-imagery. 
8 FUSION 
8.1 The Basic Idea 
Fusion is a novel concept in machine vision that 
suggests that multiple image and multiple methods 
are being used in concert to obtain specific informa- 
tion of interest. The implementation of this basic idea 
is very applications-dependent. An industrial setting 
may employ a vastly different solution to that which 
may be useful for satellite remote sensing. The com- 
bination of shape-from-shading, structured light, 
stereoscopy, ranging, etc. may be considered a toolbox 
in which the industrial robotics environment will 
extract a combination most appropriate for specific 
domains. The satellite remote sensing application may 
use a combination of shape-from-shading, stereo- 
scopy, interferometry, and exploitation of shadows 
and layover and apply this to a suite of image 
coverages of a given terrain in the optical and radar 
sensor domain. 
8.2 A Strategy for the Fusion of 
Reconstruction Methods 
Given the application-specificity of fusion any com- 
mon strategy will have to remain on a very generalized 
level. To take the example of topographic surface 
reconstruction from satellite sensors we propose that 
the methods of stereoscopic measurements, shape- 
from-shading, and interferometry be combined with 
optical surface classification. 
The procedure would need to match the individual 
images to one another so that an object area’s pro- 
perties are reflected in a set of identifiable pixels in 
the image. One therefore would want to exploit geo- 
metric disparities in the stereo process to create first a 
DEM, then a stack of co-registered terrain-corrected 
images. The DEM used for the co-registration could be 
obtained by interferometry. Therefore interferometry 
and stereo might complement one another in areas 
where one would work and the other not. Once the geo- 
metric disparities are removed, shape-from-shading 
can now be used on that image stack to extract further 
detail of the surface geometry and radiometry. Those 
properties may be obtainable by classification from 
optical data and may then be verified and detailed by 
the microwave observations. 
  
  
     
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.