VOLUME 73, NUMBER 1
PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING & REMOTE
SENSING
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR PHOTOGRAMMETRY
AND REMOTE SENSING
This month’s cover is a digital aerial image of the Belaggio in Las Vegas,
Nevada was captured by Keystone Aerial Surveys using
the new Microsoft Vexcel UltraCam-X at a flying height
of 7700 feet above sea level and a pixel size of 15 centimeters
(GSD).
As large scale mapping applications are rapidly becoming
important, the ability to deliver imagery at fast intervals
has become critical. The UtraCamX collects pixels
at a sustained rate of 3 GBits per second. It maintains a
forward overlap of 70% at 3 cm pixels and an 80% overlap
at 5 cm pixels is feasible at normal flying speeds.
Technology Results include:
Urban mapping with minimal occlusions
Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) with no spikes
or holes
Ortho-photo production from only the most central
image portions
Support of automated image analysis
Features
UltraCam-X employs 7.2 micrometer pixel CCD technology,
providing the largest available image
format at 14,430 x 9,420 pixels, without sacrificing radiometric performance.
All-new optical system by LINOS maintains image sharpness and high radiometric range well into the
corners of each image.
“Best in class” data generation at ~ 3 Gigabit per second.
Removable data storage units allow for unlimited storage capacity.
A case study to quantify photosynthetic efficiency on geneti-cally modified Arabidopis thaliana (L.) Heynh. plants and on leaves of four drought stressed tropical tree species.
A remote sensing process, GIS model, and analysis to generate the spatial representative runoff coefficient, C, for urban storm-water runoff estimation and to validate a composite runoff index geographic model.
The performance characteristics of an aerial mapping system using integrated sensor orientation under different qualities of differential GPS and IMU data.