Top Banner
Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement
41

Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Mar 28, 2015

Download

Documents

April Ruskin
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry

Interpretation and Measurement

Page 2: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Aerial Photographs

• Photographs taken from a platform, usually an airplane, flying above the earth’s surface.

• Can be taken from space (by astronauts) but usually taken from within the atmosphere

Page 3: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Types of aerial photos

• Vertical air photos• Vertical (on nadir) or nearly vertical angle to the

local ground surface (90° ± 3°)

• Oblique air photos• Tilted away from vertical

– High-oblique• Shows the surface, the horizon, and a portion of

sky

– Low-oblique• Shows only the surface

Page 4: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 5: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 6: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 7: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 8: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 9: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Information on air photos

• Date• Mission details• Roll + film number• Altitude (not always)• Fiducial marks

Page 10: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

pp

Page 11: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Analog vs. Digital

• Analog: Film– Emulsions react with light– B&W, Color, Color infrared– Prints, negatives

• Digital: Electronic storing device– Calibrated sensors– Digital values

Page 12: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Film vs. Digital

• Film uses grains of silver chloride embedded in gel rather than pixels.– Silver chloride turns to silver (opaque) when

exposed to light. Creates a negative.– Must pass light through negative to create a

positive (print).• Typical B&W film sensitive to UV through

red wavelengths (panchromatic)• Some films sensitive to infrared (IR film)

Page 13: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Characteristic Curve

• Film records radiance as tone – the more light (radiance) that hits the film, the more grains of silver chloride are converted to silver

• The relationship between radiance and tone is captured in the characteristic curve of the film.

Page 14: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Image courtesy Sprawls Educational Foundation www.sprawls.org.

The Characteristic Curve

Page 15: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 16: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Products

• Film-based cameras• Type

– B&W, color, color infrared, panchromatic• Format

– 9 x 9, 9 x 18, …• Media

– Negative, positive (transparent or opaque) prints

Page 17: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

photo type

Page 18: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photo Geometry

• Because airplanes are subject to turbulence, photo geometry can be less predictable than for satellite data

Page 19: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Flight characteristics that affect air photo geometry

• Flight line orientation (overlap, etc.)• Airplane movement caused by turbulence• Height, air speed, etc.

Page 20: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Flight Paths

Page 21: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Flight paths

12345

6 7 8 9 10

Side overlap Fore and aft overlap

Page 22: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Types of Distortion Caused by Aircraft

• Roll• Pitch• Yaw

Page 23: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Distortion caused by roll, pitch and yaw

Page 24: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photointerpretation

• Identifying features on the ground by using information depicted in air photos or satellite data– Shape– Size– Pattern– Shadow– Tone, color (or gray shade)– Texture– Context (Association)

Page 25: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Shape

Page 26: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Size

Page 27: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Pattern

Page 28: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Shadow

Page 29: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Color

Page 30: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Texture

Page 31: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Association or Context

Page 32: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photointerpretation

• Keys can be used to standardize interp.• Photointerpretation is both a science and

an art

Page 33: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photogrammetry

• Technique of obtaining reliable measurements of objects from their photographic images– Heights of objects– Areas– Lengths– Density– Etc.

Page 34: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photographic scale

• Relationship between the linear distance on a vertical photograph and the corresponding actual distance on the ground

• Scale is expressed as ‘representative fraction (RF)’ between linear measurements on photo (the numerator) and corresponding distance on the ground (the denominator)

Page 35: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photo scale –> ground distance

• Example • 1/24,000 or 1:24,000• 1 unit on photo = 24,000 units on ground• 1 cm = 24,000 cm• 1 mm = 24,000 mm• 1 inch = 24,000 inches• 1 inch = 24,000 in / 12 in/ft = 2,000 ft

Page 36: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Scale

• Scale is the ratio of the measured length of an object on an image to its real length on the ground– Always expressed as a ratio (e.g. 1:24,000)

• Small scale photo covers large area on ground• Small scale photo has less detail• Large scale photo cover small area on ground• Large scale photo has considerable detail

Page 37: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.
Page 38: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Scale: Photo-Ground distance

• Scale (RF) when given a photo measurement (PD) and the corresponding ground measurement (GD)

PDGDRF

1

Page 39: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Scale: Photo-Ground distance

• Distance between two points– On the ground = 1200 m– In the photo = 5 cm

000,24:124000

1

05.01200

1

mm

RF

Page 40: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Important facts

• Scale is not uniform within a photo– Pitch, roll, yaw– Terrain– Used for vertical airphotos only

• Average or Nominal scale

Page 41: Aerial Photography and Photogrammetry Interpretation and Measurement.

Photogrammetry Summary

• You can calculate many characteristics of ground properties (e.g., building heights, shrub density) from aerial photographs if you know the scale and can use simple geometry and logic.