Abstract

AbstractLinear pushbroom (LP) cameras are often used in airborne hyperspectral imaging (HSI). Orthoimages are generated for HSI analyses but these require accurate camera orientations from bundle adjustment. However, the limited image overlap leads to an over-parameterization in the bundle adjustment with six degrees of freedom per image exposure, i.e., LP image line. Feature-based matching based on salient key points in small image neighborhoods cannot be readily applied to LP image lines, since each LP image line is only a single pixel wide in one of the image dimensions. A naive mosaicing of consecutive LP image lines leads to unacceptably large errors owing to the relative camera motion within these mosaics, even for a stabilized camera. Thus, a new method that allows the use of established methods for feature-based matching from aerial LP image lines is presented, and observations are retrieved and used in the bundle adjustment. The examination of the spatial misregistration between spectral bands in HSI cameras, i.e., the chromatic aberration, is also examined. The method assumes a stabilized camera system with a processed global navigation satellite system aided inertial navigation system solution. The bundle adjustment is done by estimating trajectory corrections in time intervals and retrieving discrete trajectory estimates from cubic spline interpolation. An experiment was conducted to demonstrate the method. The chromatic aberration is shown to be of sub-pixel level in the LP HSI camera, and the resulting planimetric accuracy (normalized median absolute deviation) from the bundle adjustment is $$\sim 1/4$$ ∼ 1 / 4 of the ground sampling distance in each of the north and east components. The accurate estimates from the bundle adjustment are shown to be suitable for high-quality orthoimage generation.

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