Remote Sensing (Nov 2021)

A General Framework of Remote Sensing Epipolar Image Generation

  • Xuanqi Wang,
  • Feng Wang,
  • Yuming Xiang,
  • Hongjian You

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13224539
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 22
p. 4539

Abstract

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Epipolar images can improve the efficiency and accuracy of dense matching by restricting the search range of correspondences from 2-D to 1-D, which play an important role in 3-D reconstruction. As most of the satellite images in archives are incidental collections, which do not have rigorous stereo properties, in this paper, we propose a general framework to generate epipolar images for both in-track and cross-track stereo images. We first investigate the theoretical epipolar constraints of single-sensor and multi-sensor images and then introduce the proposed framework in detail. Considering large elevation changes in mountain areas, the publicly available digital elevation model (DEM) is applied to reduce the initial offsets of two stereo images. The left image is projected into the image coordinate system of the right image using the rational polynomial coefficients (RPCs). By dividing the raw images into several blocks, the epipolar images of each block are parallel generated through a robust feature matching method and fundamental matrix estimation, in which way, the horizontal disparity can be drastically reduced while maintaining negligible vertical disparity for epipolar blocks. Then, stereo matching using the epipolar blocks can be easily implemented and the forward intersection method is used to generate the digital surface model (DSM). Experimental results on several in-track and cross-track images, including optical-optical, SAR-SAR, and SAR-optical pairs, demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework, which not only has obvious advantages in mountain areas with large elevation changes but also can generate high-quality epipolar images for flat areas. The generated epipolar images of a ZiYuan-3 pair in Songshan are further utilized to produce a high-precision DSM.

Keywords