Automatic Scale Estimation of Structure from Motion based 3D Models using Laser Scalers
Klemen Istenic, Nuno Gracias, Aurelien Arnaubec, Javier Escartin and, Rafael Garcia

TL;DR
This paper introduces two novel laser-based methods for accurately estimating the scale of 3D models generated by monocular structure-from-motion in GPS-denied environments, especially underwater, removing calibration constraints and manual point identification.
Contribution
The paper presents fully- and partially-calibrated laser scale estimation methods that improve accuracy and ease of use in underwater 3D modeling without requiring laser-camera alignment.
Findings
Achieved 0.3% standard deviation in scale estimation in real scenarios.
Validated methods across three laser configurations and various environmental conditions.
Removed need for laser alignment and manual point identification.
Abstract
Recent advances in structure-from-motion techniques are enabling many scientific fields to benefit from the routine creation of detailed 3D models. However, for a large number of applications, only a single camera is available, due to cost or space constraints in the survey platforms. Monocular structure-from-motion raises the issue of properly estimating the scale of the 3D models, in order to later use those models for metrology. The scale can be determined from the presence of visible objects of known dimensions, or from information on the magnitude of the camera motion provided by other sensors, such as GPS. This paper addresses the problem of accurately scaling 3D models created from monocular cameras in GPS-denied environments, such as in underwater applications. Motivated by the common availability of underwater laser scalers, we present two novel approaches. A fully-calibrated…
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Taxonomy
Topics3D Surveying and Cultural Heritage · Robotics and Sensor-Based Localization · Remote Sensing and LiDAR Applications
