-57
The mesh used for the data noise reduction is of 0.24 gon,
which means an average distances between the filtered points of
about 15 cm.
The filtered scans were registered using the reference system of
acquisition 1 as the local reference system for the 3D model.
Figure 19 shows two adjacent scans in their own reference
systems while figure 20 shows the two scans oriented in the
reference system of the final 3D model.
Finally, the 3D model was converted into DXF and VRML
format (see fig. 21).
Figure 18. Original and filtered scan
The 3D model is now ready the subsequent elaborations (e.g.
true orthophoto production, geometric interpretation,...).
The whole procedure has been performed, using a standard PC,
in less than 40 minutes.
Figure 19. Adjacent scans in the acquisition reference systems
Figure 20. Adjacent scans in the 3D model reference system
6. CONCLUSIONS
Laser scanner device producers offer many different types of
software for the geometric management of the acquired data.
These software packages were developed for mechanical
application purposes but they are not able to supply an adequate
answer to the particular field of architectural surveying.
While mechanical applications usually have to describe
standard surfaces (e.g. spherical, cylindrical), architectural
surveying has to manage complex surfaces that cannot be
simplified.
The proposed algorithm and its practical application through the
LSR package offers the possibility of correctly managing the
data acquired using terrestrial laser scanner devices for the
surveying of architectural objects.
Figure 21. 3D model managed by COSMOS VRML viewer
The software automatically runs some basic procedures but
requires direct intervention for some special procedures,
allowing maximum flexibility.
The automation level reached by the LSR software allows even
unskilled operators to use the acquired data; all the problems
that involve specific metric survey knowledge are solved by the
software itself.
The 3D model produced by the LSR is not the final product of
the survey but represents the correct starting point for vector
extraction, 3D image model construction and basic geometric
interpretation.
7. REFERENCES
Boccardo P., Comoglio G. (2000). New methodologies for
architectural photogrammetric survey. International
Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol.
XXXIII, Part B5/1
Roggero M. (2001). Dense DTM from Laser Scanner Data.
OEEPE Workshop “Airborne laser scanning and
interferometric SAR for detailed digital elevation models” -
Stockholm
Beinat A., Crosilla F., Visintini D. (2000). Examples of
georeferenced data transformations in GIS and Digital
Photogrammetry by Procrustes analysis techniques.
ISPRS joint meeting “Bridging the gap”, Ljubljana 2-5 feb.
2000
8. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The research has been financed by Italian Ministry of
Education, University and Research (MIUR) project
COFIN2000 (Nat. Resp. Prof. Carlo MONTI - Research Group
Resp. Prof. Sergio DEQUAL).