LADAR SCANNING


There are various models of LADAR instruments that exist today, we used a Riegl LMS-25, which can produce a scene that is a 360 view around the scanner.  Once a scanning run begins, the LADAR instruments tilts up and down (tilt axis,
e) from strait up vertical (+90 degrees) to 45 degrees below horizontal (-45 degrees) as it rotates around (pan axis, j).  As it moves around, it shoots a laser beam very rapidly (about 300 times a second), each time recording the distance to whatever target it is aimed at (range value, x) as a point value in x,y,z space.  The scanning origin is 0,0,0.  The accuracy of  of this value is around 20 millimeters, but at close range it is even better than that (you can even see details of people and plant features at a range of just a few meters and the features of a truck about 75 meters from the scanner). 


Image of Riegl LADAR scanner displays the three primary variables of data
that the instrument collects.

e - tilt axis
j - pan axis
x – range value


scanning at
Azufrosa

scanning at
Caracol

scanned truck in a cave

scanned person

Zacatón LADAR images

Caracol LADAR images

La Pilita LADAR images

Azufrosa LADAR images
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