The International Archives of the Photogrammetry. Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B4. Beijing 2008
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Where d is the day and the fraction of the year’s day.
(Kq, P©) are the ecliptic coordinates of the sun.
£ is the obliquity of the ecliptic.
These are transformed to the horizontal coordinate system
(A,h) through the Time Equation and easy spherical
trigonometry formulation.
This way, in the same orthorectification process, it is
possible to identify those pixels that stay under the
influence of a shadow, which can be contrasted with the
digital level assigned to that pixel.
• In second place, the local enhancement of digital levels
from the image in those zones, using all the radiometric
advantages from digital photogrammetric cameras that do
the capture in 12bits.
This opens the possibility to increase the possible window of
flight for this kind of tasks, which is nowadays very limited to
the time of the year (and central hours of the day) when the
solar inclination is appropriate.
4. PROPOSAL METHODS FOR TRUE ORTHOPHOTO
The method adopted in the DATOS project, consists in an
analysis of the radial angular visibility from the terrain point, in
the nadiral direction of each image in which this point appears
(Figure 4).
This development, named “Multi-Visibility Analysis of from
the object” presents the advantages of angular methods that
resolve problems from methods based on Z-Buffer algorithms
of DSM's cell size and the availability of additional information
from buildings, and simplifies the true ortho production
process, eliminating the need to do mosaiking afterwards and
the analysis of occluded areas within images, as both stages are
included within the algorithm.
Figure 3. Example of the use of various photographs depending
on the best incidence angle, (solution Most Right).
3.3 Right True Orthophoto Module: RTO+.
RTO+ is a true orthorectification module that uses an algorithm
of intersection of the perspective ray with the DSM to search
imagery with occluded areas due to leaning objects. In this
module, an own algorithm was developed to generate true
orthophotos using a combined analysis of the optimal incidence
angle and the intersections of the ray with defined obstacles
within the digital surface model in the nadiral direction. The
analysis of visibility is done for each pixel of the orthophoto
and for all the photographs in which it will be represented, in
increasing order of distance to the corresponding nadiral points,
starting by the solution MOST RIGHT. In this way the
orthorectification and mosaiking is resolved in one step, just
like in the latter module. A height profile is considered from the
digital surface model with its origin in the corresponding terrain
point, and the longitude that is determined by the maximum
possible leaning (Figure 5).
3.4 Light RTO+ Module: LRTO+.
It is a module developed to determine shadow areas within the
orthoimage and to enhance them, using the DSM and the
information of the true position of the sun. This last module
pretends to deal with one of the principal problems of working
with orthophotos in urban areas, the presence of shadows that
make difficult to interpret final imagery and that arise important
problems of radiometry adjustment of orthorectify imagery.
Therefore, within this line it was introduced an algorithm of
shadow attenuation, based on the precise calculation of the
position of the sun for each photograph, from the exposure data
from GPS systems, and the digital surface model, combined
with the radiometry analysis of digital imagery (intersecting the
geometrical model of shadows and the empirical model of
shadows represented in the image).
The process was planned in two stages: Detection and
Enhancement (lighting). •
• In the first place the determination of shadows, based on
the same Profiles Method for detection of occluded areas
in the sun direction. The position of the sun is estimated in
ecliptic coordinates through this formula (data obtained
from the Yearbook of the Observatorio Astronómico de
Madrid of 2005 (IGN España):
/¡o s 219°:77 + 0°.98563x d +1°.915 x sen(0 o .986x d - 3°.2) + 0°.02x sen(2°xd -12°)
Pe =0°
£ = 23°.438641 -0°.00000036 xd
Figure 4,- Multi-Visibility Analysis from the object Method
The main characteristics of the Multi-Visibility Analysis from
the object Method used in True Ortho to detect shadows and
occlusions are:
• It is a radial method that analyses the visibility of each
terrain point in the principal nadiral direction,
considering it as the one that defines the closest Nadiral
point, and secondly, in increasing order of nadiral
distances of photographs where the point can be
represented.
• It is an angular method that compares visibility angles
of each point from the DSM from the terrain point with
respect to the visibility angle of the Perspective Centre.
The identification of occlusions method is named
“Nadiral Profiles Method” (Figure 5).