340 likes | 642 Views
Remote Sensing Geometry of Aerial Photographs. 1. Geometry of Vertical Aerial Photograph. Oblique photographs - Cameras oriented toward the side of the aircraft
E N D
1. Geometry of Vertical Aerial Photograph • Oblique photographs - Cameras oriented toward the side of the aircraft • Vertical photographs - camera aimed directly at the ground surface from above - difficult to recognize ground features but measurements can be made
Photo taken as part of the NAPP mission in color IR at a scale of 1:40,000. (1”=3,333’). This image has been enlarged by x factor. NIR Aerial Photographs
1. Geometry of Vertical Aerial Photograph • Photogrammetry - science of making accurate measurements from aerial photographs
2. Basic Elements • Fiducial marks • Principle point • Ground nadir • Photographic nadir • Isocenter
Frame Number Date of Photography Mission ID Nadir Point Principal Point Fiducial Marks
2. Basic elements • Fiducial marks - at the edges and corners recorded during exposure • Principle point - intersection of lines connecting opposite pairs of fiducial marks
Basic Elements • Ground nadir - point on the ground vertically beneath the center of the camera lens during exposure • Photographic nadir - intersection of the photograph and the vertical line that intersects the ground nadir and the center of the lens
Basic Elements • Isocenter - the focus of tilt - on a true vertical photo, the isocenter, the principle point, and the photographic nadir coincide
Vertical Aerial Photography • Most common type aerial photography • Camera axis as vertical as possible • Generally a tilt or error introduced in photography of 1 – 3 degrees • Small amount can be easily adjusted
Geometric Errors of Vertical Aerial Photography • Optical distortion - caused by camera problems • Tilt - caused by displacement of the focal plane from a truly horizontal position by aircraft motion (attitude) - image areas on the upper side of the tilt depict ground features in smaller than the normal scale - Roll, Crab, Pitch
Tilt • Roll distortion - about its flight axis - roll compensation • Crab distortion - caused by deflection of aircraft due to crosswind - corrections: on the plane or by computer • Pitch distortion - result in local scale change - can be ignored in most analyses
3. Relief Displacement • The direction of relief displacement is radial from nadir • It increases with (1) increasing height of the feature and (2) the distance from nadir
4. Multiple Photographs • Forward overlap: 50-60% along flight line; sidelap: 5-15%
Flight line # 1 Flight line # 2 Stereoscopic Pairs
Pre-Marked Points • Panels (targets) are placed at control point locations prior to the flight so that they will appear on the photography • Panels size depends on the scale of the photography • Painted on hard surfaces • Made of plastic sheeting, cloth, or wood on grass or soil surfaces
Multiple Photos • Stereoscopic parallax - difference in appearances of objects due to change in perspectives - it can be measured to compute the elevations of terrain
5. Orthophotographs • Aerial photographs without geometric errors introduced by tilt or relief displacement • Orthophotomaps and digital orthophoto Quarter Quad (DOQQ) - show correct planimetric position and consistent scale
Readings • Chapter 3
Multiple Photos • Conjugate principle - the image centers of preceding and succeeding photographs - lines connecting the conjugate principle points define flight axis - parallax occurs parallel to the line of flight