Abstract

Using computer vision techniques such as stereo vision systems for sea state measurement or for offshore structures monitoring can improve the measurement fidelity and accuracy with no significant additional cost. In this paper, two experiments (in-lab/open-sea) are conducted to study the performance of stereo vision system to measure the water wave surface elevation and rigid body heaving motion. For the in-lab experiment, regular water waves are generated in a wave tank for different frequencies and wave heights, where the water surface is scanned by the stereo vision camera installed on the top of the tank. Surface elevation inferred by the stereo vision is verified by an installed stationary side camera that records the water surface through the tank transparent side window, water surface elevation measured by the side camera recordings is extracted using edge detection algorithm. During the in-lab experiment a heaving buoy is installed to test the performance of Visual Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (VSLAM) algorithm to monitor the buoy heave motion. The VSLAM algorithm fuses a buoy onboard stereo vision recordings with an embedded Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) to estimate the 6-DOF of a rigid body. The Buoy motion VSLAM measurements are verified by a KLT tracking algorithm implemented on the video recordings of the stationary side camera. The open-sea experiment is implemented in Lake Somerville, Texas. The stereo vision system is installed to measure the water surface elevation and directional spectrum of the wind generated irregular waves. The open-sea wave measurements by the stereo vision are verified by a Sofar commercial wave buoys deployed in the testing location.

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