Photogrammetry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Photogrammetry

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Introduction Photogrammetry: the science, art, and technology of obtaining reliable information from photographs. Two major areas: metric, and interpretative. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Photogrammetry


1
Photogrammetry
2
Introduction
  • Photogrammetry the science, art, and technology
    of obtaining reliable information from
    photographs.
  • Two major areas metric, and interpretative.
  • Terrestrial and aerial Photogrammetry.
  • Uses of Photogrammetry topographic mapping,
    determine precise point coordinates, cross
    sections, deflection monitoring, and many other
    applications.
  • Why Photogrammetry?

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Aerial Cameras
  • For precise results, cameras must be
    geometrically stable, fast, have efficient
    shutters, sharp lenses
  • Single-lens frame cameras figure 27-2
  • most used format size is 9, focal length 6 in
  • components lens, shutter, diaphragm, filter,
    focal plane, fiducial marks.
  • shutters can be operated manually or
    automatically.
  • The camera could be leveled regardless of the
    plane orientation.
  • Exposure station and principal point.
  • Camera calibration.

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Aerial Photographs
  • True Vertical if the camera axis is exactly
    vertical, or near vertical.
  • Tilted Photographs
  • Oblique photographs high and low
  • Vertical Photos are the most used type for
    surveying applications

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Geometry of Vertical Photographs
  • Figure 27-6
  • Define image coordinate system (right handed),
    principal point, exposure station.
  • Measurements could be done using negatives or
    diapositives, same geometry.
  • Strips and Blocks.
  • Sidelap (about 30), and Endlap (about 60), why?

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Scale of a Vertical Photograph
  • Figure 28-6
  • Scale of a photograph is the ratio of a distance
    on a photo to the same distance on the ground.
  • Photographs are not maps, why?
  • Scale of a map and scale of a photograph.
  • Orthphotos
  • Scale (s) at any point

f
S
H - h
f
  • Average scale of a photograph

Savg
H - havg
If the f, H, and h are not available, but a
map is available then
photo distance
X map scale
Photo Scale
map distance
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Ground Coordinates from a Single Vertical
Photograph
  • Figure 27-8
  • With image coordinate system defined, we define
    an arbitrary ground coordinate system.
  • That ground system could be used to compute
    distances and azimuths. Coordinates can also be
    transformed to any system
  • In that ground system
  • Xa xa (photograph scale at a)
  • Ya ya (photograph scale at a)

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19
Relief Displacement on a Vertical Photograph
  • Figure 27-9
  • The shift of an image from its theoretical datum
    location caused by the objects relief. Two
    points on a vertical line will appear as one line
    on a map, but two points, usually, on a
    photograph.
  • In a vertical photo, the displacement is from the
    principal point.
  • Relief displacement (d) of a point wrt a point on
    the datum

r h
d
H
where r is the radial distance on the photo to
the high point h elevation of the high point,
and H is flying height above datum
  • Assuming that the datum is at the bottom of
    vertical object, H is the
  • flying height above ground, the value h will
    compute the object height.

20
ra/R f/H
Or ra H R f ----(1)
rb/R f/(H-h)
Or rb (H-h) R f ---(2)
Then from (1) and (2) Or ra H rb (H-h)
then D rb - ra rb hb /H
21
Flying Height of a Vertical Photograph
  • Flying height can be determined by
  • Readings on the photos
  • Applying scale equation, if scale could be
    computed
  • Example what is the flying height above datum if
    f6, average elevation of ground is 900ft, scale
    is 1100ft? Is it 1500?
  • Or, if two control points appear in the
    photograph, solve the equation
  • L2 (XB - XA)2 (YB - YA)2
  • then solve the same equation again replacing the
    ground coordinates with the photo coordinates.
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