Title :
Direct Georeferencing of Ultrahigh-Resolution UAV Imagery
Author :
Turner, David ; Lucieer, Arko ; Wallace, Luke
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Geogr. & Environ. Studies, Univ. of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia
Abstract :
Micro-unmanned aerial vehicles often collect a large amount of images when mapping an area at an ultrahigh resolution. A direct georeferencing technique potentially eliminates the need for ground control points. In this paper, we developed a camera-global positioning system (GPS) module to allow the synchronization of camera exposure with the airframe´s position as recorded by a GPS with 10-20-cm accuracy. Lever arm corrections were applied to the camera positions to account for the positional difference between the GPS antenna and the camera center. Image selection algorithms were implemented to eliminate blurry images and images with excessive overlap. This study compared three different software methods (Photoscan, Pix4D web service, and an in-house Bundler method). We evaluated each based on processing time, ease of use, and the spatial accuracy of the final mosaic produced. Photoscan showed the best performance as it was the fastest and the easiest to use and had the best spatial accuracy (average error of 0.11 m with a standard deviation of 0.02 m). This accuracy is limited by the accuracy of the differential GPS unit (10-20 cm) used to record camera position. Pix4D achieved a mean spatial error of 0.24 m with a standard deviation of 0.03 m, while the Bundler method had the worst mean spatial accuracy of 0.76 m with a standard deviation of 0.15 m. The lower performance of the Bundler method was due to its poor performance in estimating camera focal length, which, in turn, introduced large errors in the Z-axis for the translation equations.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; Web services; antennas; autonomous aerial vehicles; cameras; image resolution; remote sensing; GPS antenna; GPS module; Photoscan; Pix4D web service; airframe position; area mapping; average error; best spatial accuracy; blurry image elimination; camera center; camera exposure synchronization; camera focal length estimation; camera position record; camera positions; camera-global positioning system module; differential GPS unit accuracy; direct georeferencing technique; excessive overlap images; ground control points; image selection algorithms; in-house Bundler method; large Z-axis errors; large image amount; lever arm corrections; lower Bundler method performance; mean spatial error; microunmanned aerial vehicles; positional difference; processing time; software methods; spatial final mosaic accuracy; standard deviation; translation equations; ultrahigh resolution; ultrahigh-resolution UAV imagery direct georeferencing; worst mean spatial accuracy; Remote sensing; unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs);
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2013.2265295