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mapping is not able to meet global updating
demands.
On the other hand satellite mapping offers a
clear alternative to meet future demands.
But the situation is also complex. The early
satellite remote sensing efforts concentrated
on the low resolution/high repetitivity potent
ial of meteorological satellites and on the
medium geometric and temporal resolution of
resource satellites such as Landsat and Spot.
With military restrictions being eased there is
now the hope of using the potential of high
resolution satellites for mapping.
While the traditional governmental systems of
the USA (Landsat), France (Spot), Japan
(JERS-1), ESA (ERS), Canada (Radarsat) still
concentrate on medium resolution, Russia,
India and Germany has at least opened
possibilities in the 2 to 5 m ground pixel
range in preparation for the future.
Looking at the resolution requirements it is
clearly the 1 m ground pixel which is required
for urban studies and for disaster monitoring.
Governmental efforts in the planning stages
with Landsat 7 and Envisat will not change
this situation much, except in India, where
Cartosat is aimed at 1 m pixels, in France,
where Spot 5 aims at the 3 m pixel, in Japan,
where ALOS aims at the 2.5 m pixel.
But long anticipated advances are expected by
the commercial systems by EarthWatch
(Quick Bird), Orbital Sciences (OrbView 3),
Space Imaging (Ikonos), and West Indian
Space Ltd. (EROS B), all aiming at the 1 m
pixel during 1999.
To judge the potential of these upcoming
images the existing images of Russian space
photography (the KVR 1000, the KFA 3000)
at 2 m pixel, the German MOMS scanner at 5
m pixel and the Indian IRS 1C and D at 6 m
pixel are available in samples.
Regarding the cartographic potential this
imagery is well suitable to provide the
required planimetric accuracy, provided that
control via GPS is locally available.
Elevation accuracy still presents a problem if
elevation contours of denser than 20 m are to be
provided.
With respect to object detectability a 2 m ground
pixel is required for standard mapping. If such a
pixel size is not available quality deterioration
will result.
Urban photomapping at the scale 1:10 000 is
possible from 2 m Russian camera images of the
KVR 1000.
To solve the elevation requirements one should
remember that optical stereo-measurements
depend on the base-height ratio, which for most
satellite systems is poor.
To meet a 1 m contour requirement a pointing
accuracy of ± 2 dm is required. This is
unachievable by satellite systems.
The Stereo-MOMS principle of on-line stereo
can at best correspond to a ± 5 m point accuracy,
suitable for 20 m contours. Stereo-MOMS with
5 m pixels is, however, suitable for 1:25 000
image maps, particularly when from these
updates of maps should be made. Stereo-MOMS
offers the added advantage to generate
perspective views of the terrain.
MOMS 02-P from MIR is still an operational
sensor. Sofar over 100 M km 2 have been covered
during its operation time. Even though
processing is slow, since the tapes have to be
brought down to Kazakhstan, and transported to
Germany for processing a wealth of data has
become available.
Another 6 m pixel possibility is IRS 1C & D
which through a DLR-GAF cooperation with
India can be received daily in Neustrelitz,
Germany, for Europe.
Even though the European ESA-ERS 1/2
program to be continued with ENVISAT does
not provide the highest resolution, imaging radar
is a cheap source of supplementary data.
■ It can be used for multitemporal land use of
studies,
■ and it can be used for radar interferometry.
Much has been promised for this technique, but
relatively few independent investigations of the