Abstract

The complementation of terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) by photogrammetric acquisition techniques enables the exploitation of two different measurement principles. TLS with distance measurements can be used for acquiring large-scale point clouds at medium range distances, while image-based surface reconstruction methods enable flexible acquisition with high precision at short distances. Within this paper, an automatic procedure for the combination of photogrammetry and laser scanning is presented. Synthetic images derived from the laser scanning point clouds are used together with camera images in a common Structure-from-Motion (SfM) process. This enables an automatic registration of multiple laser scans. Furthermore, surface information can also be derived from the imagery using dense image matching methods. While the laser scanning data provides the missing scale information, the imagery can complement the dataset to fill gaps, occlusions or to resolve small details. Consequently, large datasets can be connected by registering imagery and laser scans.

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