The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
2.2.2 Time savings: Figure 16 shows an enlargement of one
of the flight trajectories, colour coded by roll angle. In this case
green indicates a roll of less than 10 deg, yellow is between 10
to 20 deg, orange is from 20 to 25 deg, red is from 25 to 30 deg,
and grey is above 30 deg. The plot clearly shows that the larger
the bank angle, the tighter the turn, and the faster the aircraft is
back on line.
Table 2 is a summary of the average turn times for the flights.
The turn times are defined as the time between the last photo in
a line and the first photo in the next line. The percent
improvement is computed with respect to the flight having a
maximum bank angle of 25 deg with 170 sec average turn time.
#
Max Roll
(deg)
Avg Spd
(knot)
Avg Turn
(sec)
%
Improvemen
t
1
25
105
170
n/a
2
25
97
150
n/a
3
40
97
110
35
4
30
97
120
29
5
40
116
110
35
6
30
116
140
18
7
30
116
130
24
8
35
127
120
29
Avg
28
Table 2. Summary of Average Turn Times
The results show that simply by increasing the bank angle from
25 deg to 30 to 40 deg, the time to fly the turns was reduced by
an average of 28%. Using the average time to turn of 170
seconds for the 25 deg bank angle flight, this translates to an
average savings of 48 seconds per turn. With an average of 12
turns per flight, and an average of 50 flights per year, this
translates to a savings in flight time of 12x44x48 = 28,800
seconds or 8 hours. Such a savings could easily be doubled or
tripled for standard survey missions that have many more turns
than a DSS flight test, especially if the turns are being flown at
a bank angle less than 25 deg (say at 15 to 20 deg).
3. CONCLUSIONS
The new Applanix SmartBase and IN-Fusion technology
implemented in the POSPac MMS software represents a
paradigm shift in operational efficiency for aerial mapping:
• It can produce the same position accuracy as standard
differential GPS with a dedicated reference station,
but without the restriction of having to always fly less
than 75 km from a reference station
• It can solve for the correct integer ambiguities
without the need to fly within 30 km or less of a
reference station
• It can eliminate the need to fly flat turns, which
reduces the time to fly a mission, enables more
flexible mission execution in restricted airspace, and
reduces crew fatigue leading to fewer mistakes and
increased safety.
Future work will focus on clearly defining the requirements for
reference station location, density, and data quality in order to
reliably and robustly meet the performance claims, especially
during periods of increased ionosphere activity.
As a final note, performance results are only expected to
improve as additional GNSS observables are added to the
processing.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors would like to thank the entire POSPac Air team for
the months of blood, sweat and tears they have put into this
development. Thanks are also given to J.P. Barrier from
Track’air for his useful input on optimal aircraft bank angles for
survey missions.
REFERENCES
Hakli P., 2004, Practical Test on Accuracy and Usability of
Virtual Reference Station Method in Finland, FIG Working
Week 2004, Athens, Greece
Hutton J., Bourke, T., Scherzinger, B., 2007, New
Developments of Inertial Navigation Systems at Applanix,
Photogrammetric Week 2007
Landau H., Vollath U., and Chen X., 2002, Virtual Reference
Station Systems, Journal of Global Positioning Systems, Vol. 1,
No. 2, 2002
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