Abstract

Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are becoming a common tool for aerial sensing applications. Nevertheless, sensed data need further processing before becoming useful information. This processing requires large computing power and time before delivery. In this paper, we present a parallel architecture that includes an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), a small embedded computer on board, a communication link to the Internet, and a cloud service with the aim to provide useful real-time information directly to the end-users. The potential of parallelism as a solution in remote sensing has not been addressed for a distributed architecture that includes the UAV processors. The architecture is demonstrated for a specific problem: the counting of olive trees in a crop field where the trees are regularly spaced from each other. During the flight, the embedded computer is able to process individual images on board the UAV and provide the total count. The tree counting algorithm obtains an F 1 score of 99.09 % for a sequence of ten images with 332 olive trees. The detected trees are geolocated and can be visualized on the Internet seconds after the take-off of the flight, with no further processing required. This is a use case to demonstrate near real-time results obtained from UAS usage. Other more complex UAS applications, such as tree inventories, search and rescue, fire detection, or stock breeding, can potentially benefit from this architecture and obtain faster outcomes, accessible while the UAV is still on flight.

Highlights

  • Many precision agriculture works are using Unmanned aerial systems (UAS) due to their flexibility and low price [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We present a parallel architecture that includes an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), a small embedded computer on board, a communication link to the Internet, and a cloud service with the aim to provide useful real-time information directly to the end-users

  • This paper presents remote sensing as an Internet service, using a UAS for a simple tree counting case

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Summary

Introduction

Many precision agriculture works are using UAS due to their flexibility and low price [1,2,3,4,5]. Once the aerial work is finished, they are transferred to a computer for post-processing. Software such as Pix4Dmapper [7], Correlator3D [8], or Agisoft PhotoScan [9] are used to generate a mosaic where all the images are stitched together thanks to a generous overlapping (60–80%) [10]. Remote sensing using UAS is today a reality. They are becoming a useful tool, especially in non-populated areas, for forestry and agriculture. Using commercial off-the-shelf payload, [19] related how a UAV with an RGB camera is used for the inventory of trees in a nursery of plants. Palm tree counting from RGB images was addressed in [22] by integrating template matching and object-based image analysis

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