Comparing meshes - what am I really measuring?
Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2017 4:37 pm
Hi all
I am not sure I'm doing the right thing here......
I have two aerial surveys of a sand dune system as meshes (the PCs are rather large!). I have managed to align them by point picking, and then do a mesh to mesh comparison.
The scalar field that is generated on one of the layers makes some sense - some areas have eroded, particularly in blow out/slack areas, and some areas have grown by deposition (ridge crests and clumps of vegetation). However, the magnitude of the change seems rather large for a 10 week gap between flights...up to and over 1m
So, I was thinking - what ACTUALLY is being measured here. Is it the cumulative change in x,y, and z direction?
I note that the dialogue box that comes up allows me to disentangle x, y, and z changes - strangely these seem empty and show nothing, which confuses me even more.
thanks
Paul
I am not sure I'm doing the right thing here......
I have two aerial surveys of a sand dune system as meshes (the PCs are rather large!). I have managed to align them by point picking, and then do a mesh to mesh comparison.
The scalar field that is generated on one of the layers makes some sense - some areas have eroded, particularly in blow out/slack areas, and some areas have grown by deposition (ridge crests and clumps of vegetation). However, the magnitude of the change seems rather large for a 10 week gap between flights...up to and over 1m
So, I was thinking - what ACTUALLY is being measured here. Is it the cumulative change in x,y, and z direction?
I note that the dialogue box that comes up allows me to disentangle x, y, and z changes - strangely these seem empty and show nothing, which confuses me even more.
thanks
Paul