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AIRBORNE REMOTE SENSING EXPERIENCES
WITH DIRECT PLATFORM ORIENTATION
Charles K. Toth
Center for Mapping
The Ohio State University
1216 Kinnear Road, Columbus, OH 43212-1154
E-mail: toth@cfm.ohio-state.edu
Commission VII, Working Group 1
KEY WORDS: Sensor Integration, Digital Imaging Sensors, GPS, INS, Airborne Mapping
ABSTRACT
Unprecedented technological advancements in generic computer hardware and sensor technology have created numerous
new mapping methods and redefined the entire spatial data extraction methodology in the last few years. These changes
have dramatically impacted the remote sensing and mapping industry, including almost every level of the spatial data
acquisition, processing, and dissemination process.
Airborne remote sensing has long suffered from the lack of adequate and affordable platform orientation. Although the
accuracy requirements in this field have always been somewhat relaxed compared to topographic mapping, the need for
more precise georeferencing has started to grow recently. Increasing use of integrated Global Positioning Systems (GPS)
and Inertial Navigation Systems (INS) as a core aerial platform orientation component will provide a powerful new tool
for georeferencing modern airborne remote sensing and mapping systems. |
1. INTRODUCTION
Modern airborne multi- and hyperspectral systems are
based on electronic imaging technology. Typically line
or area Charge-Coupled Devices (CCD) form the heart
of the sensory system complemented by analog or
mostly digital data acquisition components. There has
been a variety of image formation methods such as
pushbroom, scanning, three-line, and frame camera
geometry models. Hyperspectral systems usually scan
across a line on the ground, generating a large number
of pixels in each scan line while aircraft motion
provides the second direction to form an image. The
optical projection system splits the incoming ray into
many narrow spectral components for each pixel,
adding a third dimension to the acquired data. In
contrast, state-of-the-art multispectral systems are based
largely on a frame camera model and come with a less
sophisticated optical projection system, splitting the
incoming beam into a relatively few wide spectral
channels.
Multi- and hyperspectral imaging systems provide a
new extension to airborne remote sensing and mapping
technologies by providing an additional data dimension
to the spectral signature. Due to the unparalleled
advancements of generic computer hardware and sensor
technologies, there have been a large number of
airborne multi- and hyperspectral systems developed
since the early 1990s. An excellent review of 19
airborne hyperspectral systems is given in (Birk and
McCord, 1994). In fact, the rapid emergence of these
systems has far outpaced the rate of how applications
are being found for the data, coming in large volume
from these sensors. The relatively high price of the early
airborne hyperspectral systems has also been a major
obstacle in the commercialization of the multi- and
hyperspectral imaging technologies. At present, with the
significantly improved expertise and with dramatically
falling hardware prices, combined with increasing
performance, applications are about to enter map
production. An already commercially successful system
in the multispectral market is the ADAR system from
Positive Systems. AISA is similar hyperspectral system
from Finland, see (Mákisara, 1993).
An analysis of the system structure of the multi- and
hyperspectral systems can easily reveal that the
georeferencing task of the image data has played a
somewhat secondary role at the beginning. This was due
to two facts: (1) hyperspectral imaging itself was quite
new, and (2) high-precision platform orientation was in
its infancy (GPS constellation was not complete and
high-precision INS systems were unaffordable in the
early 1990s). Over time, however, the demand has
started to grow toward more accurate georeferencing of
captured data. GPS has been a key component in this
process by providing precise geographic location data
(latitude, longitude, and altitude) of the aircraft at the
time images are acquired. Although this solution was a
major step ahead, it had serious limitations. First, GPS
positions were available only at distant time epochs
(typically once every second). Especially for
hyperspectral systems, where continuous recording is
mandatory, this presented an uneven accuracy pattern of
location data. Second and more importantly, a single
GPS itself could not provide the aircraft attitude data
crucial in high-precision georeferencing. Obviously, the
availability of location and attitude data can
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Part 7, Budapest, 1998 47
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