4.6 Article

UAV Photogrammetry under Poor Lighting Conditions-Accuracy Considerations

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s21103531

Keywords

UAV; photogrammetry; night; model; light pollution

Funding

  1. Gdansk University of Technology under the ARGENTUM-'Excellence Initiative-Research University' program [DEC-42/2020/IDUB/I.3.3]

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The authors of this paper discuss the potential and challenges of using UAV photogrammetry during darker time of the day, highlighting the differences in day- and night-time photogrammetric models and factors affecting them. They also present conclusions based on their comparisons of the two models.
The use of low-level photogrammetry is very broad, and studies in this field are conducted in many aspects. Most research and applications are based on image data acquired during the day, which seems natural and obvious. However, the authors of this paper draw attention to the potential and possible use of UAV photogrammetry during the darker time of the day. The potential of night-time images has not been yet widely recognized, since correct scenery lighting or lack of scenery light sources is an obvious issue. The authors have developed typical day- and night-time photogrammetric models. They have also presented an extensive analysis of the geometry, indicated which process element had the greatest impact on degrading night-time photogrammetric product, as well as which measurable factor directly correlated with image accuracy. The reduction in geometry during night-time tests was greatly impacted by the non-uniform distribution of GCPs within the study area. The calibration of non-metric cameras is sensitive to poor lighting conditions, which leads to the generation of a higher determination error for each intrinsic orientation and distortion parameter. As evidenced, uniformly illuminated photos can be used to construct a model with lower reprojection error, and each tie point exhibits greater precision. Furthermore, they have evaluated whether commercial photogrammetric software enabled reaching acceptable image quality and whether the digital camera type impacted interpretative quality. The research paper is concluded with an extended discussion, conclusions, and recommendation on night-time studies.

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