Remote Sensing (Jun 2024)

The Generation of High-Resolution Mapping Products for the Lunar South Pole Using Photogrammetry and Photoclinometry

  • Pengying Liu,
  • Xun Geng,
  • Tao Li,
  • Jiujiang Zhang,
  • Yuying Wang,
  • Zhen Peng,
  • Yinhui Wang,
  • Xin Ma,
  • Qiudong Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16122097
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 12
p. 2097

Abstract

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High-resolution and high-accuracy mapping products of the Lunar South Pole (LSP) will play a vital role in future lunar exploration missions. Existing lunar global mapping products cannot meet the needs of engineering tasks, such as landing site selection and rover trajectory planning, at the LSP. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO)’s narrow-angle camera (NAC) can acquire submeter images and has returned a large amount of data covering the LSP. In this study, we combine stereo-photogrammetry and photoclinometry to generate high-resolution digital orthophoto maps (DOMs) and digital elevation models (DEMs) using LRO NAC images for a candidate landing site at the LSP. The special illumination and landscape characteristics of the LSP make the derivation of high-accuracy mapping products from orbiter images extremely difficult. We proposed an easy-to-implement shadow recognition and contrast stretching method based on the histograms of the LRO NAC images, which is beneficial for photogrammetric and photoclinometry processing. In order to automatically generate tie points, we designed an image matching method considering LRO NAC images’ features of long strips and large data volumes. The terrain and smoothness constraints were introduced into the cost function of photoclinometry adjustment, excluding pixels in shadow areas. We used 61 LRO NAC images to generate mapping products covering an area of 400 km2. The spatial resolution of the generated DOMs was 1 m/pixel, and the grid spacing of the derived DEMs was 1 m (close to the spatial resolution of the original images). The generated DOMs achieved a relative accuracy of better than 1 pixel. The geometric accuracy of the DEM derived from photoclinometry was consistent with the lunar orbiter laser altimeter (LOLA) DEM with a root mean square error of 0.97 m and an average error of 0.17 m.

Keywords