INVESTIGATING ADJUSTMENT OF AIRBORNE LASER SCANNING STRIPS WITHOUT USAGE OF GNSS/IMU TRAJECTORY DATA

Airborne laser scanning (ALS) requires GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System; e.g. GPS) and an IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit) for determining the dynamically changing orientation of the scanning system. Because of small but existing instabilities of the involved parts - especially the mounting calibration - a strip adjustment is necessary in most cases. In order to realize this adjustment in a rigorous way the GNSS/IMU-trajectory data is required. In some projects this data is not available to the user (any more). Derived from the rigorous model, this article presents a model for strip adjustment without GNSS/IMU-trajectory data using five parameters per strip: one 3D shift, one roll angle, and one affine yaw parameter. In an example with real data consiting of 61 strips this model was successfully applied leading to an obvious improvement of the relative accuracy from (59.3/23.4/4.5) [cm] to (7.1/7.2/2.2) (defined as RMS values in (X/Y/Z) of the differences of corresponding points derived by least squares matching in the overlapping strips). This example also clearly demonstrates the importance of the affine yaw parameter.