The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B4. Beijing 2008
To create a project by using ISPM
- clutters (buildings, vegetation, water and bridges)
- altimetry (ground height)
- roads and railways
Figure 1. Three Categories of Digital Data
The client’s general requirements: To describe the clutter
objects with a closed polygon; the linear objects with a
continuous line. Each clutter object should be completed with a
3D point located inside the polygon with a Z-value
corresponding to the highest point of the object, and their height
precision should be less than 1 meter.
According the above-mentioned requirements, we complete the
work in two steps: data capture and data editing. Here first we
would like to introduce the method for data capture.
4.1. Capture of Road Data
4.1.1. The classification of road data
It includes highways, main roads, secondary roads, local and
urban routes, lanes and paths, railways.
4.1.2. Geometrical specifications
Because all the lines representing the roads networks contribute
to the definition of digital terrain model, the density of the
network can improve DEM. Therefore the 3D data component
must be very accurate. The roads under and on the viaduct or
river bridges must be captured in a continuous way; however
they have to be interrupted in front of a tunnel entrance. The
roads must intersect at common nodes, two intersecting roads
must have the same z-value at intersection.
4.2. Capture of altimetry data
Altimetry is generally defined by the breaklines, but it can
sometimes include 3D points and contour lines. The main
purpose is to improve the digital terrain model outside the road
network by giving all the terrain shapes and breaks. They
include the tops of the embankments, the bottoms of the
embankments, the thalweg lines, the crest lines, 3D mass points,
contour lines. All these data should be captured with the same
z-value at intersections.
4.3. Capture of clutter data
Clutter data are classified into four main categories:
constructions, vegetation, water and bridges. At the end of
capture, every kind of object must be described by a set of
closed polygons whose height is given by a 3D point. This is
performed in two main steps:
Step 1: 3D capture
3D capture, that means the exterior outlines of each object
should be captured first and classified into different layer
according to their height difference. A 3D point located within
each clutter object should be captured at the maximal elevation
of the object. It should be noticed that all the holes (yard, glade,
or island) must be attached to the exterior contour using an
interior limit. (See Figure 2)
Step 2: Creation of topology (Generation of closed polygon)
To transfer a set if 2D data from captured 3D data and all
polygon objects will be picked up from 2D data to generate
polygons by using GeoGraphics so as to reach an effect that
each polygon must be associated to each 3D point. Please refer
to Figure 3.
(Figure 2)
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