Abstract

Abstract. In June 2015 Leica Geosystems launched the first large format aerial mapping camera using CMOS sensor technology, the Leica DMC III. This paper describes the motivation to change from CCD sensor technology to CMOS for the development of this new aerial mapping camera. In 2002 the DMC first generation was developed by Z/I Imaging. It was the first large format digital frame sensor designed for mapping applications. In 2009 Z/I Imaging designed the DMC II which was the first digital aerial mapping camera using a single ultra large CCD sensor to avoid stitching of smaller CCDs. The DMC III is now the third generation of large format frame sensor developed by Z/I Imaging and Leica Geosystems for the DMC camera family. It is an evolution of the DMC II using the same system design with one large monolithic PAN sensor and four multi spectral camera heads for R,G, B and NIR. For the first time a 391 Megapixel large CMOS sensor had been used as PAN chromatic sensor, which is an industry record. Along with CMOS technology goes a range of technical benefits. The dynamic range of the CMOS sensor is approx. twice the range of a comparable CCD sensor and the signal to noise ratio is significantly better than with CCDs. Finally results from the first DMC III customer installations and test flights will be presented and compared with other CCD based aerial sensors.

Highlights

  • In 2003 the DMC Digital Mapping Camera was released by Z/I Imaging

  • In June 2015 Leica Geosystems launched the first large format aerial mapping camera using CMOS frame sensor technology, the Leica DMC III. It is an evolution of the DMC II using the same system design with one large monolithic PAN sensor and four multi spectral RGBN camera heads

  • For the first time a CMOS sensor large had been used with 391 Megapixel as PAN chromatic sensor, which is an industry record

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Summary

Introduction

In 2003 the DMC Digital Mapping Camera was released by Z/I Imaging. It was the first large format digital frame sensor designed for mapping applications. In 2010 Z/I Imaging released the DMC II which was the first digital aerial mapping camera using a single ultra large CCD frame sensor for the PAN camera head. In June 2015 Leica Geosystems launched the first large format aerial mapping camera using CMOS frame sensor technology, the Leica DMC III. It is an evolution of the DMC II using the same system design with one large monolithic PAN sensor and four multi spectral RGBN camera heads. The design and the manufacturing of such a large imaging sensor chip was a very demanding and complex task

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