In: Wagner W., Szekely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
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In this work some basic photogrammetric processing tools, such
as the stereo matching, 3D coordinate determination,
interpolation algorithms to generate a regular grid DSM, ortho-
rectification and image mosaicking were used. Complementary,
some tools of the BLUH software package, created at the
Institute for Photogrammetry and Geoinformation, University
of Hannover (Jacobsen, 2000), and other programmed by the
authors were applied to optimise the procedure efficiency. DSM
and orthoimage data integration and analysis were carried using
a commercial GIS software.
2. APPLICATION AREA AND DATA ACQUISITION
The application area has an extension of 15 km to the south of
the city of Porto, which includes in the north part the estuary of
the river Douro (Figure 1). The area is subject to strong effects
of the sea (Intensive action from the ocean), which produces
Figure 1. Map of the area with the flight plan (created with
Google Earth)
In the scope of the monitoring program, it was decided to
acquire aerial digital photography twice a year, before and after
winter. In this way it is possible to assess the effect of winter
storms over the beaches. It was also decided to acquire
photographs in very low tide condition in order to map as much
as possible the intertidal area.
forward overlap and 30% side lap. Figure 1 shows the centre
lines of the two strips.
The pan-chromatic images, used in the process of digital
surface model (DSM) generation, have a dimension of 7680 by
13824 pixels, with a pixel size 12 pm. According to the camera
specifications the focal length is 120.000 mm, the principal
point is at the image centre and images are virtually distortion
free.
The base-height ratio in digital cameras is smaller than in
conventional analogical cameras. In the present photos a
parallax of 1 pixel (10 cm on the ground) corresponds to a
height difference of 34 cm, on average.
Images were acquired by a private company, using GPS/INS
direct georeferencing equipment (IGI Aerocontrol) and standard
processing techniques as for any other large scale topographic
mapping work. According to the information provided
(Municipia, 2009), a boresight calibration was performed after
the camera was mounted and all the relative positions of GPS,
IMU and camera were measured with total stations. GPS
positioning of the flights was done relative to the Portuguese
network of GPS permanent stations (IGP, 2009). The reference
system used was ETRS89. The data processing software was
IGI Aero-office. According to the processing reports provided,
exterior orientation parameters are given in UTM coordinate
system with appropriate corrections of scale factor and meridian
convergence.
During the monitoring periods four flights were done. Table 1
contains information about date and start time of the image
acquisition. A full flight is carried in less than 10 minutes.
Flight no.
Date
Start time (UTC)
1
14-Nov-2008
09:25
2
23-Apr-2009
08:06
3
18-Nov-2009
10:42
4
5-May-2010
14:11
Table 1. Date and start time of the four flights
Some of the times were early in the morning, which would be
inconvenient for normal photogrammetric purposes. In the
present case, since the area of interest is essentially sand, that
can be an advantage because some shadow effects occur in the
sand that facilitate the stereomatching.
Figure 2. Example of part of the study area, in the estuary of
river Douro, near the city of Porto
The data was acquired with a digital camera Zeiss-Intergraph
DMC which allows to obtain images with a ground sampling
distance (GSD) of 0.1 meters. The 15 km of the study area were
covered by a total of 100 photos in two strips, with a 60%
3. ANALYSIS OF THE EXTERIOR ORIENTATION
One of the objectives of this work is to assess if the results
provided through the adopted methodology were appropriate for
the main objectives of large scale mapping of coastal areas
without field work requirements. Several assessments were
done, some without and some with check points.
An algorithm of space intersection incorporated in the BLUH
software package was used. It gives the point of shortest
distance between the straight lines defined by the co-linearity
equations, together with the corresponding y-parallax.
3.1 Relative orientation
The first verification done was to see if the exterior orientation
parameters of consecutive photos provide an accurate relative
orientation. That is essential if stereoscopic viewing is required
as well as if calculation of 3D coordinates.
For selected stereopairs a total of 15 homologous points per pair
were manually measured and the corresponding y-parallaxes