In: Wagner W., Székely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
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RADIOMETRIC CALIBRATION OF FULL-WAVEFORM AIRBORNE LASER SCANNING
DATA BASED ON NATURAL SURFACES
Hubert Lehner a and Christian Briese a b
a Christian Doppler Laboratory, Institute of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing,
Vienna University of Technology, Gusshausstrasse 27-19, 1040 Vienna, Austria,
(hi, cb)@ipf.tuwien.ac.at
b Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological Prospection and Virtual Archaeology,
Hohe Warte 38, 1190 Vienna, Austria
Commission III/3
KEY WORDS: Radiometry, Radiometric Calibration, LIDAR, Laser scanning
ABSTRACT:
Airborne laser scanning (ALS) has become a commercially available and therefore widely used technique for obtaining the geometric
structure of the earth’s surface. For many ALS applications it is beneficial or even essential to classify the 3D point cloud into
different categories (e.g. ground, vegetation, building). So far, most classification techniques use the geometry of the 3D point cloud
or parameters which can be gained from analyzing the geometry or the number of echoes per emitted laser shot. Decomposing the
echo waveform of full-waveform laser scanners provides in addition to the 3D position of each echo its amplitude and width. These
physical observables are influenced by many different factors (e.g. range, angle of incidence, surface characteristics, atmosphere, etc.).
Therefore, these attributes can hardly be used without radiometric calibration. In this paper the theory of the radar equation will be used
to transform amplitude and echo width into radiometric calibration values, such as backscatter cross section, backscattering coefficients
or incidence angle corrected versions of those. For this aim, external reference targets with known backscatter characteristics are
necessary for the absolute radiometric calibration. In contrast to other approaches, this paper presents the usage of natural surfaces for
this calibration task. These surfaces are observed in order to determine their backscatter characteristics independently from the ALS
flight mission by a RIEGL reflectometer. Based on these observations the data of the ALS flight can be calibrated. Calibration results
of data acquired by a RIEGL LMS-Q560 sensor are presented and discussed. Next to a strip-wise analysis, the radiometric calibration
results of different strips in the overlapping region are studied. In this way, the accuracy of the calibration is analyzed (1) based on
a very large area with approximately homogeneous backscatter characteristics, namely a parade yard, and (2) relatively by analyzing
these overlapping regions.
1 INTRODUCTION
Airborne laser scanning (ALS, also referred to as airborne LI
DAR (light detection and ranging)) is an active sampling method
that is widely used for obtaining the geometric structure of the
earth’s surface. The resulting point cloud is a good basis for
the modelling of the landscape for a variety of applications, e.g.
hydrology (Mandlburger et al., 2009), city modelling (Rotten-
steiner et al., 2007), forest mapping (Naesset, 1997, Hollaus et
al., 2007), archaeology (Doneus et al., 2008). For these applica
tions it is typically necessary to classify the ALS data into dif
ferent classes (e.g. ground, vegetation, buildings). Most of the
developed classification methods just rely on the geometric infor
mation provided by the acquired point cloud. However, with the
introduction of small-footprint full-waveform (FWF) ALS sen
sors into the commercial market further additional attributes, i.e.
the echo width and amplitude, for each echo can be determined.
These attributes can be seen as physical observables that allow
studying the radiometry of ALS data. However, in order to uti
lize this information a radiometric calibration of the ALS data is
essential (Wagner et al., 2008b).
For the radiometric calibration of ALS data different methods
were already published. Next to their mathematical or physi
cal framework the approaches differ in the use of reference data.
Some publications do not use reference surfaces at all and only
try to compensate for specific influencing factors (Luzum et al.,
2004, Donoghue et al., 2007, Hôfle et al., 2007). Another group
of authors rely on artificial reference targets that were placed
within the area of interest during the data acquisition campaign
(Ahokas et al., 2006, Kaasalainen et ah, 2007), while the third
group of researchers tries to solve the radiometric calibration task
with the usage of natural reference targets (Coren and Sterzai,
2006, Wagner et ah, 2006, Briese et ah, 2008).
Within this paper the practical application and validation of the
radiometric calibration of small-footprint FWF-ALS data based
on natural surface elements is presented and studied. The calibra
tion procedure relies on the radar equation (Wagner et ah, 2006)
and on natural reference surfaces. These surfaces are observed
in-situ by a RIEGL reflectometer (Briese et ah, 2008). Based on
these observations, the data of the ALS flight can be calibrated.
In order to demonstrate the practical capability and to study the
quality of the radiometric calibration this process is applied to
an FWF-ALS data set acquired by a RIEGL LMS-Q560 sensor
over the city of Vienna, Austria. Next to the practical application
of the method the resulting calibrated data set is analysed strip-
wise by a visual comparison of the radiometric information in the
overlapping area of two strips. Furthermore, a quantitative com
parison of the calibrated data sets is performed by an analysis of a
difference model in the overlapping zone. Finally, after the dis
cussion of the results, a short summary and an outlook into future
research work conclude the paper.
2 RADIOMETRIC CALIBRATION
2.1 Theoretical Background
The basic relation between the transmitted power Pt and the re
ceived power P r of an ALS system can be described by the LIDAR