The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part Bl. Beijing 2008
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The exposure of the images is done mechanically whereby an
electrical impulse triggers a mechanical device which in turn
triggers the camera. Approximate values for coordinates (X, Y,
Z-position) of the perspective centre and the flight direction k
are obtained via a GPS-logger (GlobalSat DG 100) which
records a GPS NMEA-string every second.
Figure 2: UAV “SUSI” in the air
After the flight the GPS-data and the recorded trigger impulses
are synchronised. During the flight the GPS-data is down linked
to ground and serves for the navigation of the UAV on a laptop.
On the laptop the GPS-data is displayed on top of a
georeferenced map or an aerial map to support the navigation
and the triggering of the images once the UAV is within the
survey area. The most important technical parameters of the
two micro-UAVs are summarised in Table 1.
UAV Carolo P330
UAV „SUSI“
Type of aircraft
Model plane
Paraglider UAV
Weight
5 kg (max. payload
0.4 kg)
5 kg (max. payload
5.0 kg)
Speed
16 m/s - 30 m/s
0 m/s - 8 m/s
Range
+++
++
Endurance
max. 60 min
max. 140 min
Weather and Wind
dependency
++
+++
Sensor platform
Fixed, camera inside
model plane
Gimbal-mounted
platform
GPS transfer /
recording
Downlink and
onboard storage
Downlink and no
onboard storage
Synchronisation
GPS/camera
Not available
Not available
Sensor
Canon PowerShot
S60
Sony DSC R1
Sensor size (calc.)
7.176 * 5.319 mm
21.5 * 14.4 mm
Resolution (pixel)
2,592 * 1,944
3,888 * 2,592
Pixel size (calc.)
2.7 pm
5.5 pm
Type of chip
CCD
CMOS
Exposure interval
fixed, every 5 s
manually
Exposure delay
not applied (~ 0,15 s)
not applied
Navigation
autonomously (Way
Points)
Manually (display on
PC)
Table 1: Comparison of the two Micro-UAVs “Carolo P330”
and “SUSI”
3.3 Interior Orientation
The determination of the interior orientation is necessary for
both Micro-UAV’s which use off-the-shelf digital cameras. The
calibration was done with the software “Australis” , Version
6.0 from Photometrix (www.photometrix.com.au). Internally
the software is based upon a free network optimisation. The test
field calibration was done with a flat test field. The test field,
which consists of 35 retro targets has an extent of approx. 3.5 *
4.0 m. Images were taken from 5 different positions. A total of
14 converging images were taken for a calibration. The
software computes the full range of the interior orientation
parameters. Because for the later processing the
photogrammetry software LPS was be used, a calibration with a
limited set of parameters (focal length, image center, radial
distortion) was conducted. A graphic display of the radial
distortion of both cameras (Figure 3) shows that the Sony DSC
R1 is nearly free of radial distortion, while the Canon
PowerShot reveals a very strong radial distortion of up to 100
pixels at the image comers.
Radial distance r' [mm]
Figure 3: Radial distortion of Canon PowerShot S60 and Sony
DSCR1
4. RESULTS
4.1 Test flights
A total of three test flights were conducted to obtain practical
information of the photogrammetric performance of the two
Micro-UAVs. Two test flights were carried out with the System
Carolo P 330 on 4 th May 2007. Beside the pthotogrammetric
analysis the data should be used for a vitality analysis of field
trials at the University of Applied Science in Soest. The
weather conditions for the flights were quite suitable apart from
a wind of ca. 3 Bft. Due to the small size of the first test site
(200 x 450 m) Merklingsen 1 (M 1 in table 2) the first flight
was conducted manually. The second test site Merklingsen 2
(M 2) with an area of 1000 x 750 m was flown autonomously.
The test flight Wahlsdorf (W 1) (300 x 500 m) with the system