Photogrammetry Flight Planning
Photogrammetry Flight Planning
Flight Planning
Success of photogrammetric project depends on acquisition of good quality pictures Due to weather and ground conditions, time frame for photography is limited Reflights are expensive and causes long delays on project Mission must be carefully planned and executed according to flight plan Consists of flight map, (where photos should be taken) and specifications
Stereopair
photo 1 photo 2
Neat model
photo 1 photo 2
Overlap
Common area covered by two successive photos of the same flight line or strip Usually 60% 5%
Common area covered by two adjacent flight lines About 25-30% 10% (generally 30%)
Overlap
Forward overlap/Endlap
Direction of flight
Lateral overlap/Sidelap
Flight lines
Flight Plan
What the aircrew has to do as indicated by flight lines The design of aerial photography flight in order to obtain desired photos at a certain scale, i.e., how the air crew will fly (where to put the flight lines, how high, etc.)
Generally follows four cardinal directions East-West (E-W) or North-South (N-S) Should be along the longer dimension of the area If over mountain ridges or valleys, go along the direction of the features to maintain an almost constant scale; if a flight line crosses mountains, scale will be smaller in the valley than in the mountains
Project area boundary Camera focal length 3.5, 6, or 12 Photoformat size standard is 9 or 23 cm Photoscale Overlap requirements (in percentage) percentage of endlap or sidelap To be more Least number of flight lines economical Least number of exposures
Flying height Distance between exposures or Airbase (B) Distance between flight lines Total number of exposures Flying height above mean sea level of each flight line Total time needed for photography
s = photoformat/size f = focal length Hmge = flying height above m.g.e. o = overlap in % S = equivalent ground distance of photoformat
s f
Hmge
o S
Flying Height
H mge = f s p
Dexp = De = S ( 1 f .o.)
Where: S = equivalent ground length of the photoformat size (s) S = (sp)(s) f.o. = forward overlap (in decimals) s = photoformat size sp = photoscale factor
D fl = D f = S ( 1 s.l.)
Where: S = equivalent ground length of the photoformat size (s) S = (sp)(s) s.l. = sidelap (in decimals) s = photoformat size sp = photoscale factor
De = ( 15,000 ) ( 23) ( 1 0.60 ) De = 138, 000 cm = 1,380 m = 1.38 km 1.38 t = 20 10 = 0.92 hours 300 t = 55.2 minutes