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Transcript of Basics of Imaging Systems II Preparatory Session Lecture 2 Prepared by R. Lathrop 9/99, updated...
![Page 1: Basics of Imaging Systems II Preparatory Session Lecture 2 Prepared by R. Lathrop 9/99, updated 9/01, 8/03, 9/04 based on material in Avery & Berlin 5th.](https://reader036.fdocuments.in/reader036/viewer/2022062304/56649d995503460f94a83792/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Basics of Imaging Systems II
Preparatory Session Lecture 2
Prepared by R. Lathrop 9/99, updated 9/01, 8/03, 9/04
based on material in Avery & Berlin 5th ed 1992 Chap 4
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Photogrammetry
• Photogrammetry is defined as the technique of obtaining reliable measurements of objects from photographs
• To make accurate measurements it is necessary to determine, as accurately as possible, photographic scale
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Types of aerial photos
• Vertical photos - camera axis vertical
• Tilted photos - 1-3o off vertical, virtually all aerial photos are unintentionally tilted
• High oblique - intentional inclination, includes horizon
• Low oblique - does not include horizon
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Mapping or metric camera
• Single lens frame camera• High geometric quality• Film format is 230 mm (~9 in)
on a side• Focal length of 152 mm
common• Fiducial marks for later
registration and defining principal point of the photo
Keystone’s Wild RC-10 mapping camera
B&W NAPP photo
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Digital Framing/Scanning Systems
• Charge coupled device (CCD): electronic sensor sensitive to a particular wavelength of light, that are generally physically separate on the focal plane
• RGB color image generally has separate RGB CCDs
• There can be difficulty in spatial co-registering of the different wavebands for the same pixel
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Digital Mapping Camera: Zeiss/Intergraph Imaging
•2d CCD matrix (array) to ensure a rigid image geometry similar to a traditional precision film platen
•Panchromatic 7000 x 4000 pixels •Color 3000 x 2000 pixels
•Separate lens for each band•Multiple smaller camera heads to create image rather than a single, large diameter •12 bit radiometric resolution
http://imgs.intergraph.com/dmc/
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Digital Line Sensing Systems:Leica Airborne Digital Sensor (ADS40)
http://www.gis.leica-geosystems.com/products/ads40/
•Pushbroom linear array system rather than a 2D framing system•3 line scanners : forwards, downwards and backwards to provide for stereoscopic coverage•Three CCD sensors: B&W color (RGB) & NIR
12,000 pixels across •RGB co-registration through special trichroid filter that splits beam from single lens, rather than 3 different lens•Field of View of 64o
•Produces up to 100GB of data per hour of flight
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Overlapping Stereophotography
• Overlapping photography is needed to determine parallax and stereo/3D viewing
• Endlap - ~60%
• Sidelap - ~20-30%
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Pushbroom Scanning vs. 2D Framing
Graphics from http://www.gis.leica-geosystems.com/products/documents/ADS40_product_description.pdf
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Photographic Scale
• Scale defines the relationship between a linear distance on a vertical photograph and the corresponding actual distance on the ground
• Photographic scale indicates proportional distance
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Photographic Scale
• Scale expressed as a representative fraction (RF) between the linear distance on the photo (numerator) and the corresponding distance on the ground (denominator)
• Example: 1/25,000 or 1:25,000 means that a length of 1 unit of measurement on the photo represents 25,000 units of measurement on the ground
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Small vs. Large Scale
• Small scale: larger denominators objects appear small on the
image image covers larger ground area e.g. 1:120,000
• Large scale: smaller denominatorsobjects appear large on the
image image covers smaller ground area e.g. 1:10,000
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Alternative ways to express Photographic Scale
• 1:24,000 can be expressed as 1 in. = 2,000ft
1 = 1 in * 12in = 12 in = 1 in 24,000 24,000 in 1ft 24,000 ft 2,000 ft
1:100,000 same as 1 cm = 1 km 1:60,000 same as 1 in = 0.95 mi 1:300,000 same as 1 in. = 4.7 mi1:1,000,000 same as 1 in = 15.8 mi
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Photographic Scale
• Scale = f /H’ = d/D • where
f = focal lengthH’ = height above terraind = image distanceD = ground distanceh = terrain elevationH = flying height (h + H’)
H’
f
D
d
h
H
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Scale determination from focal length and altitude
RF = f / H’ where: f = focal length
H’ = flying height above terrain
Example: f = 210 mm
H = 2,500 m MSL ground elevation = 400 m
RF = 210 mm * 1m = 210 .
(2,500 m - 400 m) 1000 mm 2,100,000
RF = 1 or 1:10,000
10,000
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Scale determination from photo-ground distance
RF = PD / GD = d / D
where: PD = photo distance between 2 points GD = map distance between 2 points
Example: PD = 5 cm GD = 1,584 m
RF = 5 cm * 1m = 5 = 1 1584m 100 cm 158,400 31,680
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Scale determination from Photo-Map distances
RF = PD / (MD * MS)
where: PD = photo distance between 2 points MD = map distance between 2 points MS = map scale denominator
Example: PD = 3.2cm MD = 6cm MS = 50,000
RF = 3.2 cm = 3.2 cm = 1 6 cm * 50,000 300,000 cm 93,750
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Effect of flying height on ground coverage
x
Adapted from Lillesand & Kiefer, 2nd edition
H’1
H’2
H’1 > H’2
D1 > D2
D2
D1
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Effect of focal length on ground coverage
x
Adapted from Lillesand & Kiefer, 2nd edition
H’1
f1 > f2
D1 < D2
f1
f2
D1
D2
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Ground Coverage
• Ground coverage, D, of photo frame varies with f and H’
• as f decreases, ground coverage increases e.g. f1 = 1/2 f2 D1 = 2D2 A1 = 4A2
• as H’ increases, ground coverage increases e.g. H’1 = 2H’2 D1 = 2D2 A1 = 4A2
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Ground Coverage example
Case 1 Case 2 film size = 9.0” = 230mm film size = 9.0” f1 = 210 mm f2 = 152 mm H’ = 12,200 m H’ = 12,200 m Scale = ? Scale = ? D = ? D = ? 1 = 210 mm = 1 1 = 152 mm = 1 . MS 12,200m 58,000 MS 12,200m 80,000 D = 230mm x 58,000 = 13.3km D = 230mm x 80,000 = 18.4km
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National High Altitude program (NHAP)
• Flying Height, H’ = 12,200 m• color IR camera
f = 210 mm scale 1:58,000 area per frame 13.3 x 13.3 km
• panchromatic camera f = 152 mm
scale 1:80,000 area per frame 18.4 x 18.4 km
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Ground Sample Distance (GSD)In digital camera systems interested in Ground Sample Distance = the size of the individual camera pixels projected onto the ground
GSD = array element size * H’ .
focal length
Example: array element size = 0.009mm
f = 28 mm H’ = 1800m
GSD(m) = 0.009mm x 1800m = 0.6 m
28 mm
A GSD of 0.6m does not necessarily mean we can resolve objects 0.6m in size. General Rule of thumb: GSD should be at least one half the size of the smallest object of interest.
Example taken from Comer et al. 1998 PERS, pp. 1139-1142.
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Ground Coverage for Scanning Systems
• W = 2 H’ tan tan opp/adjwhere W = swath width
H’ = flying height above terrain
= ½ FOV of scanner
H’
W
Example: Leica ADS40
= 64o
if H’ = 2880 m
W = 2 x 2880m tan32o = 3600m
Adj = H’
Opp = ½ W
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Determining Photo Orientation
• Photo acquisition date, roll/frame #’s, and other annotation are almost always along northern edge of photo
• Sometimes eastern edge is used• Only way to be certain is to compare photo to an
appropriate map
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Map vs. Photo Projection Systems
• Maps have a orthographic or planimetric projection, where all features are located in their correct horizontal positions and are depicted as though they were each being viewed from directly overhead. Vertical aerial photos have a central or perspective projection, where all objects are positioned as though they were viewed from the same point.
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Image Displacement• Relief displacement is due to
differences in the relative elevations of objects. All objects that extend above or below a specified ground datum plane will have their images displaced.
• The taller the object, the greater the relief displacement
http://www.mfb-geo.ch/text_d/news_old_d8.html
Quickbird image of Washington Monument
Even satellite imagery can have relief displacement
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Radial Displacement
• A photo’s central projection leads to image displacement where objects are shifted or displaced from their correct positions
• Objects will tend to lean outward, i.e. be radially displaced.
• The greater the object is from the principal point, the greater the radial displacement.
• Example: cooling towers towards
the edge of photo show greater
radial displacement.
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Maps vs. Aerial Photos
• Maps: Scale is constantNo relief displacement
• Photos: Scale varies with elevationRelief displacement
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Orthophotography
• Orthophoto - reconstructed airphoto showing objects in their true planimetric position
• Geometric distortions and relief displacements are removed
• Orthophotoquad - orthophotos prepared in a standard quadrangle format with same positional and scale accuracy as USGS topographic maps
• DOQ - digital orthophoto quad
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20021 foot ground spatial resolution per pixel
Digital Orthophotography: the new standard
Distortions removed, rectified to a standard projection/coordinate system and in digital form for ready input to a GIS
UTM or State Plane
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Aerial Photographic Sources• National High Altitude Photography (NHAP): (1980-
1987) 1:58,000 CIR or 1:80,000 Pan• National Aerial Photography Program (NAPP):
(since 1987) 1:40,000 CIR• NASA high altitude photography: (since 1964)
1:60,000-1:120,000 PAN, COLOR, CIR• These images are archived by the Eros Data Center as
part of the USGS Global Land Information System. To search archive http://edc.usgs.gov/webglis
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Aerial Photographic Sources• USDA: (since 1955): mainly PAN of
1:20,000-1:40,000. These photos are archived by the Aerial Photography Field Office http://www.fsa.usda.gov/dam/APFO/airfto.htm
• National Archives and Records Administration archives older (pre- 1950’s) aerial photography http://www.nara.gov/research/ordering/mapordr.html
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Aerial Photographic Sources• National Ocean Survey (NOS) coastal photography:
(since 1945), color, scales of 1;10,000 - 1:50,000• The photos are used for a variety of geo-positioning
applications, which include delineating the shoreline for Nautical Chart creation, measuring water depths, mapping seabed characteristics, and locating obstructions to marine and air navigation.
• http://mapfinder.nos.noaa.gov
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Digital Orthophotography Sources• New Jersey 1995/97 & 2002 digital orthophotos
are available from the USGS Eros Data Center and the NJ Office of Information Technology. Individual images can be downloaded
http://gisdata.usgs.net
http://njgin.nj.gov
• Or viewed interactively http://mapping.usgs.gov
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Contract Photography
• Existing aerial photographs may be unsuitable for certain projects
• Special-purpose photography - may be contracted through commercial aerial survey firms
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Contracting Photography Considerations
• Camera focal length• Camera format size• Photo scale/ground coverage desired• Film/filter• Overlap/sidelap• Photo Alignment/tilt• Seasonal considerations• Time-of-Day considerations/ cloud cover
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Seasonal considerations
• Cloud free conditions, ideally < 10%• Leaf-off: spring/fall when deciduous tree leaves
are off and ground free of snow used for topographic/soils mapping, terrain/landform interpretation
• Leaf-on: summer when deciduous trees are leafed out or late fall when various tree species may be identified by foliage color used for vegetation analyses
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Time-of-day considerations
• Quantity of light determined by solar elevation angle
no shadows: +- 2 hrs around solar noon shadows desired: early or late day
• Spectral quality: possibility of sun/hot spotscausing image saturation
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Flight Alignment
• Flight lines are planned to be parallel
• Usually in a N-S or E-W direction. For maximum aircraft efficiency, they should be parallel to the long axis of the study area (minimize aircraft turns).
• Crab or drift should be minimized
• Tilt , 2-3o for any single photo, average < 1o for entire project
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Example: Flight planning for aerial photography of submerged aquatic vegetation
• Color film gives better water depth penetration
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Example: Flight planning for aerial photography of submerged aquatic vegetation
• Other considerations
• Scales of 1:12,000 to 1:24,000 needed
• Time of year: late spring-early summer
• Time of day: sun angles 15-30o, generally early morning to reduce wind/surface waves
• Tides: +- 2 hours of lowest tide
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Example: Flight planning for aerial photography of submerged aquatic vegetation
• GeoVantage Digital Camera• 4 bands: Blue, Green, Red, NIR• Pixel Array Size: 0.00465mm• Focal Length: 12mm• Field of View: 28.1o crossrange, 21.1o along range• Easily mounted on wheel strut• Coordinated acquisition with Inertial Measurement
Unit to determine precise geodetic positioning to provide for georegistration and orthorectification
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Example: Flight planning for aerial photography of submerged aquatic vegetation
• What Flying Height (m) needed to resolve individual SAV beds of 1m wide x 10 m long (0.001 ha in size)?
• General Rule of Thumb: GSD at a minimum of ½ the size of smallest feature. In this case need, GSD of 0.5m.
• GSD = array element size * H’ . focal length
• Example: array element size = 0.00465mm f = 12 mm GSD = 0.5m H’ = ?
• H’ = 0.5m * 12 mm / 0.00465mm = 1290 m
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Example: Flight planning for aerial photography of submerged aquatic vegetation
• What will be the image width(m)?
• Remember your basic trigonometry? Tan = opposite / adjacent
• Tan FOV/2 = (1/2 image width)/H’
• Image width = 2 * tan14.05 * 1290m = 2 * 0.250 * 1290m
= 645 m
FOV = 28.1o
H’ = 1290m
opp
adj