How to create a true intensity panoramic images from phase-shift TLS data bypassing firmware filtering of 3D points
Posted: Fri May 28, 2021 2:56 pm
Hello everyone,
I work with hemispherical photography of the forest canopy. I am interested in using active remote sensing technology to create hemispherical images. Terrestrial Laser Scanners can do that. I work with a FAROS Focus 130X. There is a paper about this topic https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 231930382X The principle in the paper is good, but there are a drawback that I spotted and we (me and the paper authors) want to address it.
Briefly, the 3D data suffer from filtering and we want to access the information before that filtering step in order to make images. We know that it is possible since both SCENE and TRIMBLE RealWorks software can do that, but they deliver a good-looking picture rather than the true intensity information (as the paper shows). Results can be obtained from this type of image, but they are far from ideal. We think that optimal results would be obtained from images just like that, but with the true intensity info in each pixel.
Any clue about how to produce such images would be greatly appreciated.
https://mfr.osf.io/render?url=https%3A% ... 2Fdownload (link to a figure that illustrates this problem)
I work with hemispherical photography of the forest canopy. I am interested in using active remote sensing technology to create hemispherical images. Terrestrial Laser Scanners can do that. I work with a FAROS Focus 130X. There is a paper about this topic https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 231930382X The principle in the paper is good, but there are a drawback that I spotted and we (me and the paper authors) want to address it.
Briefly, the 3D data suffer from filtering and we want to access the information before that filtering step in order to make images. We know that it is possible since both SCENE and TRIMBLE RealWorks software can do that, but they deliver a good-looking picture rather than the true intensity information (as the paper shows). Results can be obtained from this type of image, but they are far from ideal. We think that optimal results would be obtained from images just like that, but with the true intensity info in each pixel.
Any clue about how to produce such images would be greatly appreciated.
https://mfr.osf.io/render?url=https%3A% ... 2Fdownload (link to a figure that illustrates this problem)