Abstract

AbstractOver the last three decades, satellite imagery has been instrumental in mapping and monitoring water quality. However, satellites often have limitations due to image availability and cloud cover. Today, the spatial resolution of satellite images does not provide finer detail measurements essential for small‐scale water pollution management. Drones offer a complimentary platform capable of operating below cloud cover and acquiring very high spatial resolution datasets in near real‐time. Studies have shown that drone mapping over water can be done via the Direct Georeferencing approach. However, this method is only suitable for high‐end drones with accurate GNSS/IMU. Importantly, this limitation is exacerbated because of the difficulty in placing targets over water, which can be used to improve the accuracy after the survey. This study explored a new method called Assisted Direct Georeferencing which combines the benefits of traditional Bundle Adjustment with Direct Georeferencing. The performance of the approach was evaluated over a variety of different scenarios, demonstrating significant improvement in the planimetric accuracy. From the results, the method reduced the error in XY of drone imagery from MAE of 18.9 to 3.4 m. The result shows the potential of low‐cost drones with Assisted Direct Georeferencing in closing the gap to high‐end drones.

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