The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part B5. Beijing 2008
the local patch parameters. In this paper, the point cloud is repre
sented as a net view, therefore, the only planar parameter quality
to be estimated is the height z of the point with respect to the
planar fitting. Assume the following linear model: Z = A ■ P,
where A = [x», t/i, l]t=i,..., n , Z = [zi]i=ri,..., n and P represents
the planar patch parameters. The variance-covariance matrix of
the planar patch parameters is given in Eq.7
Q, = A T Ql'A
(7)
In determining the local patch parameters, a higher number of
local patch points will result in more accurate local patch param
eters. In general, using the redundancy of the observations allows
to derive adjusted points on the adjusted local planar patch with a
precision far below the nominal point precision of an individual
laser point. For each set of points X, the propagated variance a rn
at the center of gravity M is considered as shown in Eq.8.
O’rn — A-mQf)
(8)
where A m = [M x ,M y , 1].
3 EXPERIMENT SET-UP
The laser scanner measurements optimization is investigated us
ing the experiment set-up as shown in Figure 1. The laser scanner
LS880 HE80 from FARO (FARO, 2007) is used. The laser beam
of this laser scanner is deflected at 90° on a rotating mirror which
determines the vertical field of view of 320° since the scanner
cannot scan under itself. The head of the scanner rotates around
its vertical axis to allow the horizontal field of view of 360°. A
full resolution scan has typically around 130 million of points.
The experiments are performed in a closed area with short ranges,
therefore the temperature and humidity influences are neglected.
The scans considered here contain about 26 millions of points.
The room scanned for this experiment consists of two planar
walls and one cylindric wall. As the focus of this paper is into
the planar features quality, the cylindric wall is excluded from
the analysis. As depicted in Fig. 1(a), the laser scanner provides a
panoramic view of the area by measuring the reflection of a phase
modulated laser beam. The laser scanner cannot scan shiny ma
terials such as metal or mirror like materials, and low reflectance
materials are measured with lower accuracies (Bucksch et al.,
2007, Kremen et al., 2006, Clark and Robson, 2004). The ceil
ing of the room of experiment contains very shiny materials and
is composed of several small segments. Therefore, the ceiling
is not part of this study. The floor is covered with light colored
linoleum. The walls are painted in white and are very smooth
surfaces.
Four test plates that were used in previous studies are added on
the two planar walls. Two reference charts (ESSER TE 106 and
TE 109) for color and grey scale were previously used in a remis
sion experiment (Bucksch et al., 2007). A white coated plywood
and a medium-density fibre board were used before in a scan an
gle experiment (Soudarissanane et al., 2007). Fig. 1(b) represents
a 3D model of the room of experiment.
The laser scanner scans the room from two different stand-points.
The stand-point A is approximately situated in the middle of the
room. The stand-point B is situated in the comer formed by the
two planar walls.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
In this section, the influence of the location of the laser scanner on
the point cloud quality is presented, based on two stand-points.
(a)
(c)
Figure 1: (a) Panoramic intensity image obtained with the FARO
LS880 laser scanner, (b) 3D view model of the experiment set
up, (c) Net model of the room of experiment, A and B are two
stand points of the laser scanner.
4.1 Intensity measurements
In addition to the cartesian coordinates, for each point in the point
cloud an intensity value ranging from 0 to 1 is given. This in
tensity value represents the amount of reflected light intensity as
regard to the emitted light. This value is provided by the manu
facturer of the laser scanner. According to the providers, the laser
scanner measure the received intensity value, which depends on
the surface roughness, but also on the scattering behavior of the
surface based on its reflectivity properties. Note that this prod
uct is not calibrated. Fig.2 depicts the point cloud colored with
the measured intensity value for both stand-points. As the laser
scanner cannot scan under itself, an empty spot is observed at the
position of the laser scanner.
The intensity values on the walls at the position A, shown in
Fig.2(a) are homogeneous for each scanned surface. The dis
tances to each surface are large enough to obtain homogeneous
intensity values. The walls are painted in white, which has high
reflectance properties. The returned signals are stronger for the
white walls than for the light-colored floor reflections. The wooden
plate hang on the upper left wall as depicted in Fig.2(a). It has
lower reflectance properties than the white walls or the white
plate, therefore has lower measured intensity values. The two
reference charts are having a black-colored frame with a very low
reflectance property.
Fig.2(b) shows the intensity measurements from position B, where
the laser scanner was placed nearer to the comer formed by the
two planar walls. A saturation effect is observed for signals ob
tained with near perpendicular scanning direction. The white
walls and the light-colored floor have a similar order of inten
sity values. At the near perpendicular directions, the saturation is
characterized by very high intensity values. The spatial intensity
distribution is clearly affected by the position of the scanner.
4.2 Incidence angles
Fig.3 depicts the incidence angle of the laser beam for each stand
points. Clearly the position of the laser scanner has an influence
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