The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
Download

The requested paper has a corresponding corrigendum published. Please read the corrigendum first before downloading the article.

Publications Copernicus
Download
Notice on corrigendum

The requested paper has a corresponding corrigendum published. Please read the corrigendum first before downloading the article.

Citation
Articles | Volume XL-3/W2
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-XL-3-W2-81-2015
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprsarchives-XL-3-W2-81-2015
10 Mar 2015
 | 10 Mar 2015

DEM GENERATION WITH SHORT BASE LENGTH PLEIADES TRIPLET

K. Jacobsen and H. Topan

Keywords: Space, Adjustment, DEM/DTM, Georeferencing, Radiometric, Accuracy, Performance

Abstract. An image triplet of Pleiades images covering the area of Zonguldak, Turkey has been investigated. The height to base relation of the first to the last image is just 1:4.5 and for the first and the second image 1:9. This is quite below the usual height to base relation of 1:1.6 for a typical stereo pair of space images. The corresponding small angle of convergence influences the possible vertical accuracy, but images with such a small angle of convergence are more similar to each other as images with larger convergence angles. This enables a better image matching, improving the vertical accuracy and compensating partially the influence of poor intersection geometry. Even over forest areas no matching gaps occurred. Height models are generated with different base configurations and compared with a reference height model. Pleiades images are distributed with 50cm ground sampling distance instead of the physical size of 70cm, the image quality justifies this zooming and also the geometric results are in the range of other space images with originally 50cm GSD. The image orientation by bias corrected Rational Polynomial Coefficients (RPC) is leading with more as 160 ground control points (GCP) to root mean square (RMS) differences slightly below 1.0 GSD of the distributed images (0.5m GSD). Only negligible systematic errors have been identified. With the combination of the first and last image a standard deviation of the generated height model of 1.6m, respectively for flat terrain close to 1.0m has been reached in relation to a reference height model. The small angle of convergence is not as much influencing the height accuracy as according to simple geometric relation.

Please read the corrigendum first before accessing the article.