, CA, 9-11 Nov. 1999
AND VALIDATION
ome base camp were surveyed
d GPS and laser altimetry in
and 5).
Coffee Can Station
0
Skidoo SPS surveys
Laser altimetry su "eus
2 4 6
n surveys at Siple Dome, West
as skidoo) surveys are used to
le for comparison with laser
bias was found for the laser
systematic timing error in laser
aser range during processing.
i are converted into a local,
n where the x-axis points to
he center of the Earth, and the
tem. The position of the GPS
the SOAR tent was selected as
Equation 3 describes the
ind 5 show how the reference
iteO 2): R, {pont tee, :
)) (Egn.3)
r is not perfectly aligned with
, as defined by the INS. The
d as the angular difference
he laser axes. The estimated
es in pitch and -0.3 degrees in
son (SOAR field notes). Pitch
vely flat test field are used to
d surface shown in Figure 5 is
| no mounting bias corrections
d dp to minimize the surface
(km)
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 32, Part 3W14, La Jolla, CA, 9-11 Nov. 1999
deformation the mounting bias can be estimated. In this case
the initial estimate of -1.2 degree in pitch and - 0.3 degree in
roll was confirmed by using a simple grid search.
PA TE RUE AN ST STL TE TNT
eT"
pei LE eri cb ee Be
-450[1.. dod i i
0 2 4 6
l | |
10 12 14
eL
Distance (km)
Fig. 4. Surface derived from repeat laser altimetry (grey lines) and
snowmobile-mounted GPS (thin black lines) along Skiwayl.
53. System Accuracy
After correction of range and angular biases the SOAR system
performed well over short distances. Repeat flights over
Skiwayl show a 2.8 cm bias with an overall RMS of 10.3 cm.
The bias is attributed to surface slope, because the repeat flight
lines were approximately 25 m apart. The RMS difference is
measurement of surface roughness caused by sastrugi. Sub-
decimeter accuracy was also found when laser derived
elevations were compared to elevations measured with the
snowmobile surveys.
BIT T T T T T
—— — — — Surface from skidoo mounted GPS
a Surface from Laser altimetry before
rêtru after
Fig. 5. Comparison of measured elevations along Skiway 2 surveyed
With snowmobile-mounted GPS and laser altimetry. The two laser
profiles are derived from the same survey before and after the removal
of the laser mounting bias. The magnitude of the pitch maneuvers are
about 8 degrees off nadir.
6. REPEATABILITY AND ACCURACY
6.1. Crossing flight lines
Laser surveys that cross nearly perpendicular to one another are
evaluated to determine the repeatability of the procedure over
long baselines. ^ Crosses are evaluated by finding laser
measurements within a 10 m radius of the cross-over point. The
average elevation difference of crosses on Ice Stream C are
shown in Table 1. Table 1 also shows how crosses compare if
both laser surveys were conducted during the same or
independent GPS surveys. The agreement is better for crosses
measured during the same flight.
Elevations produced from Ice Stream C survey flight number 26
were found to have large biases of up to 84 cm. This large bias
is 8 times greater than the reported GPS RMS for that flight,
which suggests that the phase ambiguities were not resolved
throughout the entire flight. Poor GPS initialization practices
(ie. the aircraft started and ended at different base camps over
280 km apart) are the most likely source of the problem. The
end result is that the flight is of limited use for change detection
on à two year time-scale, and topographic maps made with this
flight could have an error of nearly a meter. Average elevation
differences are given for Ice Stream C with and without this
flight (Table 1).
Surveys Number Number of Mean
Considered of Laser Elevation
Crosses | Measurements Difference
Between
Surveys
All surveys 8 34 0.36 m
w/o 26: 4 16 0.25 m*
Same GPS 2 8 0.18 m*
Survey
Independent 2 8 0.32 m*
GPS survey
* Values do not include measurements from survey flight 26.
Table 1. Cross-over comparisons for Ice Stream C
6.2. | Coffee-can comparisons
Laser surveys go near distant coffee can stations
providing a means for evaluating accuracy over long baselines
(Fig. 6). The coffee-can markers are surveyed using precision
GPS methods and are used to study ice sheet mass balance
(Hamilton et al., 1998). GIPSY is used to determine marker
positions with a vertical error of less than 0.01 m. The laser
flights missed the coffee can site on Ice Stream C by 840 m,