Details
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 36-41 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives |
Volume | 36 |
Publication status | Published - 2005 |
Event | 2005 ISPRS Workshop Laser Scanning 2005 - Enschede, Netherlands Duration: 12 Sept 2005 → 14 Sept 2005 |
Abstract
The coastline of the North Sea is characterized by a large number of different morphological objects like dikes, dunes and tidal creeks. Due to the tidal effects and other natural forces the shape, size and position of such objects may change rapidly over time. In order to securely protect shorelines and coastal areas, a permanent monitoring has to be performed. In the past, mainly terrestrial surveys and aerial imagery have been used to obtain information about changes in time. In general these surveys include morphological features like structure lines. Important changes of the monitored objects can be detected by comparing identical morphological features of different time epochs. Unfortunately, the terrestrial surveys are very costly and timeconsuming. For this reason airborne laserscanning has been adopted to map changes of morphological objects. The first step of the monitoring task is the extraction of morphological features from the irregularly distributed 3D point cloud. One strategy of the extraction task is to fit suitable 2D functions to the 3D-points. Due to the fact that the choice of the used function represents known a priori information, structure lines can be derived from the estimated parameters of the function. However, a 2D approximation of the searched structure line is generally needed. This paper presents a new method for the extraction of structure lines from airborne laserscanner data in coastal areas using a hyperbolic tangent function. The method is based on a strategy that pre-defines the number of structure lines to be searched, the shape of the surface, the number of functions to be used and the approach how to calculate the structure lines from the surface function. Additionally, it is shown that the necessary 2D approximation can be estimated by digital edge detectors using a raster representation of the irregular laser points. Two meaningful examples are presented to demonstrate the capability of the algorithm.
Keywords
- Laser scanning, LIDAR, Structure and breakline detection, Surface reconstruction
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Computer Science(all)
- Information Systems
- Social Sciences(all)
- Geography, Planning and Development
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In: International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives, Vol. 36, 2005, p. 36-41.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Conference article › Research › peer review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Automated extraction of pair wise structure lines using airborne laserscanner data in coastal areas
AU - Brzank, A.
AU - Lohmann, P.
AU - Heipke, C.
N1 - Funding Information: This research has been financed by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under project no. 03KIS050. We acknowledge the support of our project partners: Department of Rural Area Husum (ALR), Federal Waterways Directorate (WSD) and the Lower Saxony Water Management, Coastal Defence and Nature Conservation Agency Division Norden-Norderney (NLWKN).
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - The coastline of the North Sea is characterized by a large number of different morphological objects like dikes, dunes and tidal creeks. Due to the tidal effects and other natural forces the shape, size and position of such objects may change rapidly over time. In order to securely protect shorelines and coastal areas, a permanent monitoring has to be performed. In the past, mainly terrestrial surveys and aerial imagery have been used to obtain information about changes in time. In general these surveys include morphological features like structure lines. Important changes of the monitored objects can be detected by comparing identical morphological features of different time epochs. Unfortunately, the terrestrial surveys are very costly and timeconsuming. For this reason airborne laserscanning has been adopted to map changes of morphological objects. The first step of the monitoring task is the extraction of morphological features from the irregularly distributed 3D point cloud. One strategy of the extraction task is to fit suitable 2D functions to the 3D-points. Due to the fact that the choice of the used function represents known a priori information, structure lines can be derived from the estimated parameters of the function. However, a 2D approximation of the searched structure line is generally needed. This paper presents a new method for the extraction of structure lines from airborne laserscanner data in coastal areas using a hyperbolic tangent function. The method is based on a strategy that pre-defines the number of structure lines to be searched, the shape of the surface, the number of functions to be used and the approach how to calculate the structure lines from the surface function. Additionally, it is shown that the necessary 2D approximation can be estimated by digital edge detectors using a raster representation of the irregular laser points. Two meaningful examples are presented to demonstrate the capability of the algorithm.
AB - The coastline of the North Sea is characterized by a large number of different morphological objects like dikes, dunes and tidal creeks. Due to the tidal effects and other natural forces the shape, size and position of such objects may change rapidly over time. In order to securely protect shorelines and coastal areas, a permanent monitoring has to be performed. In the past, mainly terrestrial surveys and aerial imagery have been used to obtain information about changes in time. In general these surveys include morphological features like structure lines. Important changes of the monitored objects can be detected by comparing identical morphological features of different time epochs. Unfortunately, the terrestrial surveys are very costly and timeconsuming. For this reason airborne laserscanning has been adopted to map changes of morphological objects. The first step of the monitoring task is the extraction of morphological features from the irregularly distributed 3D point cloud. One strategy of the extraction task is to fit suitable 2D functions to the 3D-points. Due to the fact that the choice of the used function represents known a priori information, structure lines can be derived from the estimated parameters of the function. However, a 2D approximation of the searched structure line is generally needed. This paper presents a new method for the extraction of structure lines from airborne laserscanner data in coastal areas using a hyperbolic tangent function. The method is based on a strategy that pre-defines the number of structure lines to be searched, the shape of the surface, the number of functions to be used and the approach how to calculate the structure lines from the surface function. Additionally, it is shown that the necessary 2D approximation can be estimated by digital edge detectors using a raster representation of the irregular laser points. Two meaningful examples are presented to demonstrate the capability of the algorithm.
KW - Laser scanning
KW - LIDAR
KW - Structure and breakline detection
KW - Surface reconstruction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85036835468&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85036835468
VL - 36
SP - 36
EP - 41
JO - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives
JF - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences - ISPRS Archives
SN - 1682-1750
T2 - 2005 ISPRS Workshop Laser Scanning 2005
Y2 - 12 September 2005 through 14 September 2005
ER -