ISBN-13: 9781848215368 / Angielski / Twarda / 2014 / 224 str.
Conventional topographic databases, obtained by capture on aerial or spatial images provide a simplified 3D modeling of our urban environment, answering the needs of numerous applications (development, risk prevention, mobility management, etc.). However, when we have to represent and analyze more complex sites (monuments, civil engineering works, archeological sites, etc.), these models no longer suffice and other acquisition and processing means have to be implemented. This book focuses on the study of adapted lifting means for -notable buildings-. The methods tackled in this book cover lasergrammetry and the current techniques of dense correlation based on images using conventional photogrammetry.
Conventional topographic databases, which are often used to produce three–dimensional modeling of urban environments, are not always sufficient in the analysis of more complex sites.