62 research outputs found

    KINEMATIC CALIBRATION USING LOW-COST LiDAR SYSTEM FOR MAPPING AND AUTONOMOUS DRIVING APPLICATIONS

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    More recently, mapping sensors for land-based Mobile Mapping Systems (MMSs) have combined cameras and laser scanning measurements defined as Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR), or laser scanner together. These mobile laser scanning systems (MLS) can be used in dynamic environments and are able of being adopted in traffic-related applications, such as the collection of road network databases, inventory of traffic sign and surface conditions, etc. However, most LiDAR systems are expensive and not easy to access. Moreover, due to the increasing demand of the autonomous driving system, the low-cost LiDAR systems, such as Velodyne or SICK, have become more and more popular these days. These kinds of systems do not provide the total solution. Users need to integrate with Inertial Navigation System/ Global Navigation Satellite System (INS/GNSS) or camera by themselves to meet their requirement. The transformation between LiDAR and INS frames must be carefully computed ahead of conducting direct geo-referencing. To solve these issues, this research proposes the kinematic calibration model for a land-based INS/GNSS/LiDAR system. The calibration model is derived from the direct geo-referencing model and based on the conditioning of target points where lie on planar surfaces. The calibration parameters include the boresight and lever arm as well as the plane coefficients. The proposed calibration model takes into account the plane coefficients, laser and INS/GNSS observations, and boresight and lever arm. The fundamental idea is the constraint where geo-referenced point clouds should lie on the same plane through different directions during the calibration. After the calibration process, there are two evaluations using the calibration parameters to enhance the performance of proposed applications. The first evaluation focuses on the direct geo-referencing. We compared the target planes composed of geo- referenced points before and after the calibration. The second evaluation concentrates on positioning improvement after taking aiding measurements from LiDAR- Simultaneously Localization and Mapping (SLAM) into INS/GNSS. It is worth mentioning that only one or two planes need to be adopted during the calibration process and there is no extra arrangement to set up the calibration field. The only requirement for calibration is the open sky area with the clear plane construction, such as wall or building. Not only has the contribution in MMSs or mapping, this research also considers the self-driving applications which improves the positioning ability and stability

    Automatic Extrinsic Self-Calibration of Mobile Mapping Systems Based on Geometric 3D Features

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    Mobile Mapping is an efficient technology to acquire spatial data of the environment. The spatial data is fundamental for applications in crisis management, civil engineering or autonomous driving. The extrinsic calibration of the Mobile Mapping System is a decisive factor that affects the quality of the spatial data. Many existing extrinsic calibration approaches require the use of artificial targets in a time-consuming calibration procedure. Moreover, they are usually designed for a specific combination of sensors and are, thus, not universally applicable. We introduce a novel extrinsic self-calibration algorithm, which is fully automatic and completely data-driven. The fundamental assumption of the self-calibration is that the calibration parameters are estimated the best when the derived point cloud represents the real physical circumstances the best. The cost function we use to evaluate this is based on geometric features which rely on the 3D structure tensor derived from the local neighborhood of each point. We compare different cost functions based on geometric features and a cost function based on the RĂ©nyi quadratic entropy to evaluate the suitability for the self-calibration. Furthermore, we perform tests of the self-calibration on synthetic and two different real datasets. The real datasets differ in terms of the environment, the scale and the utilized sensors. We show that the self-calibration is able to extrinsically calibrate Mobile Mapping Systems with different combinations of mapping and pose estimation sensors such as a 2D laser scanner to a Motion Capture System and a 3D laser scanner to a stereo camera and ORB-SLAM2. For the first dataset, the parameters estimated by our self-calibration lead to a more accurate point cloud than two comparative approaches. For the second dataset, which has been acquired via a vehicle-based mobile mapping, our self-calibration achieves comparable results to a manually refined reference calibration, while it is universally applicable and fully automated

    Improvement of the Geospatial Accuracy of Mobile Terrestrial LiDAR Data

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    Many applications, such as topographic surveying for transportation engineering, have specific high accuracy requirements which MTL may be able to achieve under specific circumstances. Since high rate, immersive (360 FOV), MTL is a relatively new device for the collection and extraction of survey data; the understanding and correction of errors within such systems is under researched. Therefore, the goal of the work presented here is to quantify the geospatial accuracy of MTL data and improve the quality of MTL data products. Quantification of the geospatial accuracy of MTL systems was accomplished through the use of residual analysis, error propagation and conditional variance analysis. Real data from two MTL systems was analyzed using these methods and it was found that the actual errors exceeded the manufacturers estimates of system accuracy by over 10mm. Conditional variance analysis on these systems has shown that the contribution by the interactions among the measured parameters to the variances of the points in MTL point clouds is insignificant. The sizes of the variances for the measurements used to produce a point are the primary sources of error in the output point cloud. Improvement of the geospatial accuracy of MTL data products was accomplished by developing methods for the simultaneous multi-sensor calibration of the systems boresight angles and lever arm offsets, zero error calibration, temperature correction, and both spatial and temporal outlier detection. Evaluation of the effectiveness of these techniques was accomplished through the use of two test cases, employing real MTL data. Test case 1 showed that the residuals between a control field and the MTL point cloud were reduced by 4.4cm for points located on both horizontal and vertical target surfaces. Similarly, test case 2 showed a reduction in the residuals between control points and MTL data of 2~3cm on horizontal surfaces and 1~2cm on vertical surfaces. The most accurate point cloud produced through the use of these calibration and filtering techniques occurred in test case 1 (27mm 26mm). This result is still not accurate enough for certain high accuracy applications such as topographic surveying for transportation engineering (20mm 10mm)

    Selbstkalibrierung mobiler Multisensorsysteme mittels geometrischer 3D-Merkmale

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    Ein mobiles Multisensorsystem ermöglicht die effiziente, räumliche Erfassung von Objekten und der Umgebung. Die Kalibrierung des mobilen Multisensorsystems ist ein notwendiger Vorverarbeitungsschritt für die Sensordatenfusion und für genaue räumliche Erfassungen. Bei herkömmlichen Verfahren kalibrieren Experten das mobile Multisensorsystem in aufwändigen Prozeduren vor Verwendung durch Aufnahmen eines Kalibrierobjektes mit bekannter Form. Im Gegensatz zu solchen objektbasierten Kalibrierungen ist eine Selbstkalibrierung praktikabler, zeitsparender und bestimmt die gesuchten Parameter mit höherer Aktualität. Diese Arbeit stellt eine neue Methode zur Selbstkalibrierung mobiler Multisensorsysteme vor, die als Merkmalsbasierte Selbstkalibrierung bezeichnet wird. Die Merkmalsbasierte Selbstkalibrierung ist ein datenbasiertes, universelles Verfahren, das für eine beliebige Kombination aus einem Posenbestimmungssensor und einem Tiefensensor geeignet ist. Die fundamentale Annahme der Merkmalsbasierten Selbstkalibrierung ist, dass die gesuchten Parameter am besten bestimmt sind, wenn die erfasste Punktwolke die höchstmögliche Qualität hat. Die Kostenfunktion, die zur Bewertung der Qualität verwendet wird, basiert auf Geometrischen 3D-Merkmalen, die wiederum auf den lokalen Nachbarschaften jedes Punktes basieren. Neben der detaillierten Analyse unterschiedlicher Aspekte der Selbstkalibrierung, wie dem Einfluss der Systemposen auf das Ergebnis, der Eignung verschiedener Geometrischer 3D-Merkmale für die Selbstkalibrierung und dem Konvergenzradius des Verfahrens, wird die Merkmalsbasierte Selbstkalibrierung anhand eines synthethischen und dreier realer Datensätze evaluiert. Diese Datensätze wurden dabei mit unterschiedlichen Sensoren und in unterschiedlichen Umgebungen aufgezeichnet. Die Experimente zeigen die vielseitige Einsetzbarkeit der Merkmalsbasierten Selbstkalibrierung hinsichtlich der Sensoren und der Umgebungen. Die Ergebnisse werden stets mit einer geeigneten objektbasierten Kalibrierung aus der Literatur und einer weiteren, nachimplementierten Selbstkalibrierung verglichen. Verglichen mit diesen Verfahren erzielt die Merkmalsbasierte Selbstkalibrierung bessere oder zumindest vergleichbare Genauigkeiten für alle Datensätze. Die Genauigkeit und Präzision der Merkmalsbasierten Selbstkalibrierung entspricht dem aktuellen Stand der Forschung. Für den Datensatz, der die höchsten Sensorgenauigkeiten aufweist, werden beispielsweise die Parameter der relativen Translation zwischen dem Rigid Body eines Motion Capture Systems und einem Laserscanner mit einer Genauigkeit von ca. 1 cm1\,\mathrm{cm} bestimmt, obwohl die Distanzmessgenauigkeit dieses Laserscanners nur 3 cm3\,\mathrm{cm} beträgt

    Feasibility Study to Determine the Economic and Operational Benefits of Utilizing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs)

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    This project explored the feasibility of using Unmanned Aerial Systems (UASs) in Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) operations. The research team conducted 24 interviews with personnel in four GDOT divisions. Interviews focused on (1) the basic goals of the operators in each division, (2) their major decisions for accomplishing those goals, and (3) the information requirements for each decision. Following an interview validation process, a set of UASs design characteristics that fulfill user requirements of each previously identified division was developed. A “House of Quality” viewgraph was chosen to capture the relationships between GDOT tasks and potential UAS aiding those operations. As a result, five reference systems are proposed. The UAS was broken into three components: vehicle, control station, and system. This study introduces a variety of UAS applications in traffic management, transportation and construction disciplines related to DOTs, such as the ability to get real time, digital photographs/videos of traffic scenes, providing a "bird’s eye view" that was previously only available with the assistance of a manned aircraft, integrating aerial data into GDOT drawing software programs, and dealing with restricted or complicated access issues when terrain, area, or the investigated object make it difficult for GDOT personnel to conduct a task. The results of this study could lead to further research on design, development, and field-testing of UAVs for applications identified as beneficial to the Department.Georgia Department of Transportatio

    Modeling and Simulation in Engineering

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    This book provides an open platform to establish and share knowledge developed by scholars, scientists, and engineers from all over the world, about various applications of the modeling and simulation in the design process of products, in various engineering fields. The book consists of 12 chapters arranged in two sections (3D Modeling and Virtual Prototyping), reflecting the multidimensionality of applications related to modeling and simulation. Some of the most recent modeling and simulation techniques, as well as some of the most accurate and sophisticated software in treating complex systems, are applied. All the original contributions in this book are jointed by the basic principle of a successful modeling and simulation process: as complex as necessary, and as simple as possible. The idea is to manipulate the simplifying assumptions in a way that reduces the complexity of the model (in order to make a real-time simulation), but without altering the precision of the results

    Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995)

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    The files on this record represent the various databases that originally composed the CD-ROM issue of "Abstracts on Radio Direction Finding" database, which is now part of the Dudley Knox Library's Abstracts and Selected Full Text Documents on Radio Direction Finding (1899 - 1995) Collection. (See Calhoun record https://calhoun.nps.edu/handle/10945/57364 for further information on this collection and the bibliography). Due to issues of technological obsolescence preventing current and future audiences from accessing the bibliography, DKL exported and converted into the three files on this record the various databases contained in the CD-ROM. The contents of these files are: 1) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_xls.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.xls: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format; RDFA_Glossary.xls: Glossary of terms, in Excel 97-2003 Workbookformat; RDFA_Biographies.xls: Biographies of leading figures, in Excel 97-2003 Workbook format]; 2) RDFA_CompleteBibliography_csv.zip [RDFA_CompleteBibliography.TXT: Metadata for the complete bibliography, in CSV format; RDFA_Glossary.TXT: Glossary of terms, in CSV format; RDFA_Biographies.TXT: Biographies of leading figures, in CSV format]; 3) RDFA_CompleteBibliography.pdf: A human readable display of the bibliographic data, as a means of double-checking any possible deviations due to conversion

    NASA Tech Briefs, September 2006

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    Topics covered include: Improving Thermomechanical Properties of SiC/SiC Composites; Aerogel/Particle Composites for Thermoelectric Devices; Patches for Repairing Ceramics and Ceramic- Matrix Composites; Lower-Conductivity Ceramic Materials for Thermal-Barrier Coatings; An Alternative for Emergency Preemption of Traffic Lights; Vehicle Transponder for Preemption of Traffic Lights; Automated Announcements of Approaching Emergency Vehicles; Intersection Monitor for Traffic-Light-Preemption System; Full-Duplex Digital Communication on a Single Laser Beam; Stabilizing Microwave Frequency of a Photonic Oscillator; Microwave Oscillators Based on Nonlinear WGM Resonators; Pointing Reference Scheme for Free-Space Optical Communications Systems; High-Level Performance Modeling of SAR Systems; Spectral Analysis Tool 6.2 for Windows; Multi-Platform Avionics Simulator; Silicon-Based Optical Modulator with Ferroelectric Layer; Multiplexing Transducers Based on Tunnel-Diode Oscillators; Scheduling with Automated Resolution of Conflicts; Symbolic Constraint Maintenance Grid; Discerning Trends in Performance Across Multiple Events; Magnetic Field Solver; Computing for Aiming a Spaceborne Bistatic- Radar Transmitter; 4-Vinyl-1,3-Dioxolane-2-One as an Additive for Li-Ion Cells; Probabilistic Prediction of Lifetimes of Ceramic Parts; STRANAL-PMC Version 2.0; Micromechanics and Piezo Enhancements of HyperSizer; Single-Phase Rare-Earth Oxide/Aluminum Oxide Glasses; Tilt/Tip/Piston Manipulator with Base-Mounted Actuators; Measurement of Model Noise in a Hard-Wall Wind Tunnel; Loci-STREAM Version 0.9; The Synergistic Engineering Environment; Reconfigurable Software for Controlling Formation Flying; More About the Tetrahedral Unstructured Software System; Computing Flows Using Chimera and Unstructured Grids; Avoiding Obstructions in Aiming a High-Gain Antenna; Analyzing Aeroelastic Stability of a Tilt-Rotor Aircraft; Tracking Positions and Attitudes of Mars Rovers; Stochastic Evolutionary Algorithms for Planning Robot Paths; Compressible Flow Toolbox; Rapid Aeroelastic Analysis of Blade Flutter in Turbomachines; General Flow-Solver Code for Turbomachinery Applications; Code for Multiblock CFD and Heat-Transfer Computations; Rotating-Pump Design Code; Covering a Crucible with Metal Containing Channels; Repairing Fractured Bones by Use of Bioabsorbable Composites; Kalman Filter for Calibrating a Telescope Focal Plane; Electronic Absolute Cartesian Autocollimator; Fiber-Optic Gratings for Lidar Measurements of Water Vapor; Simulating Responses of Gravitational-Wave Instrumentation; SOFTC: A Software Correlator for VLBI; Progress in Computational Simulation of Earthquakes; Database of Properties of Meteors; Computing Spacecraft Solar-Cell Damage by Charged Particles; Thermal Model of a Current-Carrying Wire in a Vacuum; Program for Analyzing Flows in a Complex Network; Program Predicts Performance of Optical Parametric Oscillators; Processing TES Level-1B Data; Automated Camera Calibration; Tracking the Martian CO2 Polar Ice Caps in Infrared Images; Processing TES Level-2 Data; SmaggIce Version 1.8; Solving the Swath Segment Selection Problem; The Spatial Standard Observer; Less-Complex Method of Classifying MPSK; Improvement in Recursive Hierarchical Segmentation of Data; Using Heaps in Recursive Hierarchical Segmentation of Data; Tool for Statistical Analysis and Display of Landing Sites; Automated Assignment of Proposals to Reviewers; Array-Pattern-Match Compiler for Opportunistic Data Analysis; Pre-Processor for Compression of Multispectral Image Data; Compressing Image Data While Limiting the Effects of Data Losses; Flight Operations Analysis Tool; Improvement in Visual Target Tracking for a Mobile Robot; Software for Simulating Air Traffic; Automated Vectorization of Decision-Based Algorithms; Grayscale Optical Correlator Workbench; "One-Stop Shopping" for Ocean Remote-Sensing and Model Data; State Analysis Database Tool; Generating CAHV and CAHVOmages with Shadows in ROAMS; Improving UDP/IP Transmission Without Increasing Congestion; FORTRAN Versions of Reformulated HFGMC Codes; Program for Editing Spacecraft Command Sequences; Flight-Tested Prototype of BEAM Software; Mission Scenario Development Workbench; Marsviewer; Tool for Analysis and Reduction of Scientific Data; ASPEN Version 3.0; Secure Display of Space-Exploration Images; Digital Front End for Wide-Band VLBI Science Receiver; Multifunctional Tanks for Spacecraft; Lightweight, Segmented, Mostly Silicon Telescope Mirror; Assistant for Analyzing Tropical-Rain-Mapping Radar Data; and Anion-Intercalating Cathodes for High-Energy- Density Cells

    Robotics 2010

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    Without a doubt, robotics has made an incredible progress over the last decades. The vision of developing, designing and creating technical systems that help humans to achieve hard and complex tasks, has intelligently led to an incredible variety of solutions. There are barely technical fields that could exhibit more interdisciplinary interconnections like robotics. This fact is generated by highly complex challenges imposed by robotic systems, especially the requirement on intelligent and autonomous operation. This book tries to give an insight into the evolutionary process that takes place in robotics. It provides articles covering a wide range of this exciting area. The progress of technical challenges and concepts may illuminate the relationship between developments that seem to be completely different at first sight. The robotics remains an exciting scientific and engineering field. The community looks optimistically ahead and also looks forward for the future challenges and new development

    A low-cost remote sensing system for agricultural applications

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    This research develops a low cost remote sensing system for use in agricultural applications. The important features of the system are that it monitors the near infrared and it incorporates position and attitude measuring equipment allowing for geo-rectified images to be produced without the use of ground control points. The equipment is designed to be hand held and hence requires no structural modification to the aircraft. The portable remote sensing system consists of an inertia measurement unit (IMU), which is accelerometer based, a low-cost GPS device and a small format false colour composite digital camera. The total cost of producing such a system is below GBP 3000, which is far cheaper than equivalent existing systems. The design of the portable remote sensing device has eliminated bore sight misalignment errors from the direct geo-referencing process. A new processing technique has been introduced for the data obtained from these low-cost devices, and it is found that using this technique the image can be matched (overlaid) onto Ordnance Survey Master Maps at an accuracy compatible with precision agriculture requirements. The direct geo-referencing has also been improved by introducing an algorithm capable of correcting oblique images directly. This algorithm alters the pixels value, hence it is advised that image analysis is performed before image georectification. The drawback of this research is that the low-cost GPS device experienced bad checksum errors, which resulted in missing data. The Wide Area Augmented System (WAAS) correction could not be employed because the satellites could not be locked onto whilst flying. The best GPS data were obtained from the Garmin eTrex (15 m kinematic and 2 m static) instruments which have a highsensitivity receiver with good lock on capability. The limitation of this GPS device is the inability to effectively receive the P-Code wavelength, which is needed to gain the best accuracy when undertaking differential GPS processing. Pairing the carrier phase L1 with the pseudorange C/A-Code received, in order to determine the image coordinates by the differential technique, is still under investigation. To improve the position accuracy, it is recommended that a GPS base station should be established near the survey area, instead of using a permanent GPS base station established by the Ordnance Survey
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