06 Fakultät Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik und Geodäsie

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/7

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Geospatial information research : state of the art, case studies and future perspectives
    (2022) Bill, Ralf; Blankenbach, Jörg; Breunig, Martin; Haunert, Jan-Henrik; Heipke, Christian; Herle, Stefan; Maas, Hans-Gerd; Mayer, Helmut; Meng, Liqui; Rottensteiner, Franz; Schiewe, Jochen; Sester, Monika; Sörgel, Uwe; Werner, Martin
    Geospatial information science (GI science) is concerned with the development and application of geodetic and information science methods for modeling, acquiring, sharing, managing, exploring, analyzing, synthesizing, visualizing, and evaluating data on spatio-temporal phenomena related to the Earth. As an interdisciplinary scientific discipline, it focuses on developing and adapting information technologies to understand processes on the Earth and human-place interactions, to detect and predict trends and patterns in the observed data, and to support decision making. The authors - members of DGK, the Geoinformatics division, as part of the Committee on Geodesy of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities, representing geodetic research and university teaching in Germany - have prepared this paper as a means to point out future research questions and directions in geospatial information science. For the different facets of geospatial information science, the state of art is presented and underlined with mostly own case studies. The paper thus illustrates which contributions the German GI community makes and which research perspectives arise in geospatial information science. The paper further demonstrates that GI science, with its expertise in data acquisition and interpretation, information modeling and management, integration, decision support, visualization, and dissemination, can help solve many of the grand challenges facing society today and in the future.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Detection, analysis, and removal of glitches from InSight's seismic data from Mars
    (2020) Scholz, John‐Robert; Widmer‐Schnidrig, Rudolf; Davis, Paul; Lognonné, Philippe; Pinot, Baptiste; Garcia, Raphaël F.; Hurst, Kenneth; Pou, Laurent; Nimmo, Francis; Barkaoui, Salma; de Raucourt, Sébastien; Knapmeyer‐Endrun, Brigitte; Knapmeyer, Martin; Orhand‐Mainsant, Guénolé; Compaire, Nicolas; Cuvier, Arthur; Beucler, Éric; Bonnin, Mickaël; Joshi, Rakshit; Sainton, Grégory; Stutzmann, Eléonore; Schimmel, Martin; Horleston, Anna; Böse, Maren; Ceylan, Savas; Clinton, John; Driel, Martin van; Kawamura, Taichi; Khan, Amir; Stähler, Simon C.; Giardini, Domenico; Charalambous, Constantinos; Stott, Alexander E.; Pike, William T.; Christensen, Ulrich R.; Banerdt, W. Bruce
    The instrument package SEIS (Seismic Experiment for Internal Structure) with the three very broadband and three short‐period seismic sensors is installed on the surface on Mars as part of NASA's InSight Discovery mission. When compared to terrestrial installations, SEIS is deployed in a very harsh wind and temperature environment that leads to inevitable degradation of the quality of the recorded data. One ubiquitous artifact in the raw data is an abundance of transient one‐sided pulses often accompanied by high‐frequency spikes. These pulses, which we term “glitches”, can be modeled as the response of the instrument to a step in acceleration, while the spikes can be modeled as the response to a simultaneous step in displacement. We attribute the glitches primarily to SEIS‐internal stress relaxations caused by the large temperature variations to which the instrument is exposed during a Martian day. Only a small fraction of glitches correspond to a motion of the SEIS package as a whole caused by minuscule tilts of either the instrument or the ground. In this study, we focus on the analysis of the glitch+spike phenomenon and present how these signals can be automatically detected and removed from SEIS's raw data. As glitches affect many standard seismological analysis methods such as receiver functions, spectral decomposition and source inversions, we anticipate that studies of the Martian seismicity as well as studies of Mars' internal structure should benefit from deglitched seismic data.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Concept and performance evaluation of a novel UAV-borne topo-bathymetric LiDAR sensor
    (2020) Mandlburger, Gottfried; Pfennigbauer, Martin; Schwarz, Roland; Flöry, Sebastian; Nussbaumer, Lukas
    We present the sensor concept and first performance and accuracy assessment results of a novel lightweight topo-bathymetric laser scanner designed for integration on Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), light aircraft, and helicopters. The instrument is particularly well suited for capturing river bathymetry in high spatial resolution as a consequence of (i) the low nominal flying altitude of 50-150 m above ground level resulting in a laser footprint diameter on the ground of typically 10-30 cm and (ii) the high pulse repetition rate of up to 200 kHz yielding a point density on the ground of approximately 20-50 points/m2. The instrument features online waveform processing and additionally stores the full waveform within the entire range gate for waveform analysis in post-processing. The sensor was tested in a real-world environment by acquiring data from two freshwater ponds and a 500 m section of the pre-Alpine Pielach River (Lower Austria). The captured underwater points featured a maximum penetration of two times the Secchi depth. On dry land, the 3D point clouds exhibited (i) a measurement noise in the range of 1-3 mm; (ii) a fitting precision of redundantly captured flight strips of 1 cm; and (iii) an absolute accuracy of 2-3 cm compared to terrestrially surveyed checkerboard targets. A comparison of the refraction corrected LiDAR point cloud with independent underwater checkpoints exhibited a maximum deviation of 7.8 cm and revealed a systematic depth-dependent error when using a refraction coefficient of n = 1.36 for time-of-flight correction. The bias is attributed to multi-path effects in the turbid water column (Secchi depth: 1.1 m) caused by forward scattering of the laser signal at suspended particles. Due to the high spatial resolution, good depth performance, and accuracy, the sensor shows a high potential for applications in hydrology, fluvial morphology, and hydraulic engineering, including flood simulation, sediment transport modeling, and habitat mapping.