RPAS Photogrammetric Mapping Workflow and Accuracy Dr Yincai Zhou & Dr Craig Roberts Surveying and Geospatial Engineering School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UNSW ➢ Background ➢ RPAS category and operation regulations ➢ RPAS photogrammetric mapping workflow ➢ Factors affecting product accuracy ➢ Summary 1 RPAS Photogrammetric Mapping Workflow and Accuracy Dr Yincai Zhou & Dr Craig Roberts (UNSW) APAS2018 Jindabyne
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RPAS Photogrammetric Mapping Workflow and Accuracy
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RPAS Photogrammetric Mapping Workflow and Accuracy
Dr Yincai Zhou & Dr Craig Roberts Surveying and Geospatial Engineering
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UNSW
➢ Background
➢ RPAS category and operation regulations
➢ RPAS photogrammetric mapping workflow
➢ Factors affecting product accuracy
➢ Summary
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• Fixed Wing vs. MultiRotor
Advantages• Simple structure• High speed• Long duration
Disadvantages• Large take-off & landing space• Not able to hover• Inflexibility to carry different
sensors
Disadvantages• High mechanical complexity• Low speed• Short flight time
Advantages• Vertical take-off and landing• Flexibility with different sensors• Able to hover and stare
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Weight classes: • micro: gross weight < 100 g• very small: gross weight 0.1 - 2 kg • small: gross weight 2-25 kg• medium: gross weight of 25 - 150 kg• large: gross weight >=150 kg
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RPA selection:• Job nature – mapping, 3D modelling or inspection• Takeoff weight – light weight, less risks• Sensor’s weight or size• Investment budget
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RPA Standard Operating Conditions (SOC):
• VLOS (visual line-of-sight) in daytime only• Under 400ft (120m) AGL (above ground level)• 30m away from people• Not in prohibited or restricted area• Not within 3NM (5.5km) of a controlled
aerodrome• Not over populated areas• Only fly one RPA at a time
*Details in Advisory Circular AC101-01
Operation category:• Excluded RPA – No ReOC or RePL required• Included RPA – ReOC & RePL required
OC – Operator’s Certificate, PL – Pilot’s Licence
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Design flowchart to determine eligibility as an excluded RPA
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1. A company with ABN/ACN
2. An employee to obtain RePL
3. Nominate a chief pilot
4. Prepare an Ops manual (CASA template)
5. Apply for ReOC
6. Chief pilot skill assessment by CASA
7. ReOC granted
8. Chief pilot is responsible for all operations
ReOC Application
RPAS Optical Sensors
RGB compact cameras RGB DSLR cameras NIR cameras
Multispectral cameras Red edge
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Image Distortion and Camera Selection
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eDistortion caused by lens:
• Consumer-grade cameras – large distortion
• Geometric-cameras – small distortion and geometrically stable
Distortion caused by moving camera:
• Electronic (rolling) shutter – large distortion
• Focal plan (mechanical) shutter – small distortion
• Leaf (mechanical) shutter – no distortion (blurry?).
Camera selection:
• Avoid rolling shutter
• Leaf shutter right choice
• Focal plan shutter for low speed flight
Project Planning
• Location (urban, rural or remote?)• Site terrain, vegetation (rich texture on images?)• Area of survey – Google Earth KML• Preferred time frame – weather permits?• Survey in standard operation conditions?• Obtain permission from CASA required?• Geometric accuracy requirement?• GSD (ground sampling distance), terrain, flying height AGL?• Site accessibility? • Launch and landing area?• Land owner consent• GCPs (ground control point) required and survey accuracy?• Flight planning.
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All photogrammetric measurements are based on overlapped images in order to obtain 3-dimensional object geometry
• Apply for permission if the flights are not in SOC
• Weather permit (raining / windy)?
• Flight height / image resolution / GSD setup
• Image overlap – lateral and longitudinal
• Time of the day to fly (image quality)
• Set drone safety features (eg return home, ceiling, geofence)
• Trained observer on site
• RPAS firmware and apps updated
• Pre-flight checklist ready
• GCP survey pre- or post- flight
• Post-flight checklist ready
Flight Planning (2)
Flight Planning (3)
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Image Quality Control
1. RPAS ground speed (motion blur)2. Flight height ( GSD and image coverage)3. Oblique angle ( GSD and image coverage)4. RPAS vibration (gimbal)5. Camera and lens quality (image distortion)6. Camera shutter speed (motion blur)7. Camera sensor resolution (GSD)8. Camera aperture (depth of field – out of focus)9. Light condition (sunny shadow, cloudy under
exposure) 10. Surface reflection (coal stockpile – under exposure)11. Large elevation change (GSD variation affect matching) 12. Time of day to capture images (e.g. high wall shadow)
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Vertical vs Oblique images
Same sensor size➢ Different ground coverage➢ Different GSD
GSD variation due to oblique angle
GSD variation due to terrain changes (1)
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• Constant flight H above take-off location (120m)• Different camera H above ground ΔH=80m (40m – 120m) • Large GSD variation: 2cm at hill top, 6cm at bottom• No oblique images