GRASS logo

NAME

i.ortho.init - Interactively creates or modifies entries in a camera initial exposure station file for imagery group referenced by a sub-block.

KEYWORDS

imagery, orthorectify

SYNOPSIS

i.ortho.init
i.ortho.init --help
i.ortho.init [-rp] group=name [xc=float] [yc=float] [zc=float] [xc_sd=float] [yc_sd=float] [zc_sd=float] [omega=float] [phi=float] [kappa=float] [omega_sd=float] [phi_sd=float] [kappa_sd=float] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]

Flags:

-r
Use initial values at run time
-p
Print initial values
--help
Print usage summary
--verbose
Verbose module output
--quiet
Quiet module output
--ui
Force launching GUI dialog

Parameters:

group=name [required]
Name of imagery group for ortho-rectification
xc=float
Initial Camera Exposure X-coordinate
yc=float
Initial Camera Exposure Y-coordinate
zc=float
Initial Camera Exposure Z-coordinate
xc_sd=float
Apriori X-coordinate standard deviation
yc_sd=float
Apriori Y-coordinate standard deviation
zc_sd=float
Apriori Z-coordinate standard deviation
omega=float
Initial Camera Omega (pitch) degrees
phi=float
Initial Camera Phi (roll) degrees
kappa=float
Initial Camera Kappa (yaw) degrees
omega_sd=float
Apriori Omega (pitch) standard deviation
phi_sd=float
Apriori Phi (roll) standard deviation
kappa_sd=float
Apriori Kappa (yaw) standard deviation

Table of contents

DESCRIPTION

Aerial photographs may be either vertical or oblique. Vertical photographs can be truly vertical (nadir), or slightly tilted (less than 3 degree from the vertical). Usually aerial photos are tilted to some degree. We refer to the term vertical photograph up to a tilt of 3 degree.
Oblique aerial photographs are purposely taken with an angle between 3 and 90 degree from the nadir direction.

The use of i.ortho.init (menu 6) is only required when rectifying a tilted or oblique aerial photo.

i.ortho.init creates or modifies entries in a camera initial exposure station file for imagery group referenced by a sub-block. These entries include: the (XC,YC,ZC) standard (e.g. UTM) approximate coordinates of the camera exposure station; initial roll, pitch, and yaw angles (in degrees) of the cameras attitude; and the a priori standard deviations for these parameters. During the imagery program, i.photo.rectify, the initial camera exposure station file is used for computation of the ortho-rectification parameters. If no initial camera exposure station file exist, the default values are computed from the control points file created in g.gui.image2target.

The following menu is displayed:

        Please provide the following information

	INITIAL XC: Meters                __________
	INITIAL YC: Meters                __________
	INITIAL ZC: Meters                __________
	INITIAL omega (pitch) degrees:    __________
	INITIAL phi  (roll) degrees:      __________
	INITIAL kappa  (yaw) degrees:     __________

	Standard Deviation XC: Meters     __________
	Standard Deviation YC: Meters     __________
	Standard Deviation ZC: Meters     __________
	Std. Dev. omega (pitch) degrees:  __________
	Std. Dev. phi  (roll) degrees:    __________
	Std. Dev. kappa  (yaw) degrees:   __________

        Use these values at run time? (1=yes, 0=no)

     AFTER COMPLETING ALL ANSWERS, HIT <ESC> TO CONTINUE
                  (OR <Ctrl-C> TO CANCEL)

The INITIAL values for (XC,YC,ZC) are expressed in standard (e.g. UTM) coordinates, and represent an approximation for the location of the camera at the time of exposure.

The INITIAL values for (omega,phi,kappa) are expressed in degrees, and represent an approximation for the cameras attitude at the time of exposure.

If ground control points are available, the INITIAL values are iteratively corrected. This is particularl useful when the INITIAL values are rather rough estimates.

The standard deviations for (XC,YC,ZC) are expressed in meters, and are used as a priori values for the standard deviations used in computation of the ortho rectification parameters. Higher values improve the refinement of the initial camera exposure. As a rule of thumb, 5% of the estimated target extents should be used.

The standard deviations for (omega,phi,kappa) are expressed in degrees, and are used as a priori values for the standard deviations used in computation of the ortho rectification parameters. As a rule of thumb, 2 degrees should be used.

If Use these values at run time? (1=yes, 0=no) is set to 0, the values in this menu are not used.

SEE ALSO

i.ortho.photo, g.gui.photo2image, g.gui.image2target, i.ortho.elev, i.ortho.camera, i.ortho.transform, i.photo.rectify

AUTHOR

Mike Baba, DBA Systems, Inc.

SOURCE CODE

Available at: i.ortho.init source code (history)

Latest change: Wednesday Oct 04 09:39:09 2023 in commit: d2972bd2eaf335160a23ab08982499776d276552


Main index | Imagery index | Topics index | Keywords index | Graphical index | Full index

© 2003-2024 GRASS Development Team, GRASS GIS 8.4.1dev Reference Manual