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Cloud photogrammetry with dense stereo for fisheye cameras.

Authors :
Beekmans, Christoph
Schneider, Johannes
Läbe, Thomas
Lennefer, Martin
Stachniss, Cyrill
Simmer, Clemens
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics; 2016, Vol. 16 Issue 22, p14231-14248, 18p, 1 Color Photograph, 7 Diagrams, 8 Graphs, 3 Maps
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present a novel approach for dense 3-D cloud reconstruction above an area of 10×10 km² using two hemispheric sky imagers with fisheye lenses in a stereo setup. We examine an epipolar rectification model designed for fisheye cameras, which allows the use of efficient out-of-the-box dense matching algorithms designed for classical pinholetype cameras to search for correspondence information at every pixel. The resulting dense point cloud allows to recover a detailed and more complete cloud morphology compared to previous approaches that employed sparse feature-based stereo or assumed geometric constraints on the cloud field. Our approach is very efficient and can be fully automated. From the obtained 3-D shapes, cloud dynamics, size, motion, type and spacing can be derived, and used for radiation closure under cloudy conditions, for example. Fisheye lenses follow a different projection function than classical pinhole-type cameras and provide a large field of view with a single image. However, the computation of dense 3-D information is more complicated and standard implementations for dense 3-D stereo reconstruction cannot be easily applied. Together with an appropriate camera calibration, which includes internal camera geometry, global position and orientation of the stereo camera pair, we use the correspondence information from the stereo matching for dense 3-D stereo reconstruction of clouds located around the cameras. We implement and evaluate the proposed approach using real world data and present two case studies. In the first case, we validate the quality and accuracy of the method by comparing the stereo reconstruction of a stratocumulus layer with reflectivity observations measured by a cloud radar and the cloud-base height estimated from a Lidar-ceilometer. The second case analyzes a rapid cumulus evolution in the presence of strong wind shear. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807316
Volume :
16
Issue :
22
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
119937785
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-14231-2016