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Determining geometric error model parameters of a terrestrial laser scanner through Two-face, Length-consistency, and Network methods
Published
Author(s)
Ling Wang, Bala Muralikrishnan, Prem K. Rachakonda, Daniel S. Sawyer
Abstract
Terrestrial laser scanners (TLS) are increasingly used in large-scale manufacturing and assembly where measurement uncertainties required are on the order of few tenth of a millimeter or smaller. In order to meet these stringent requirements, systematic errors within a TLS are compensated in-situ through a process referred to as self-calibration. In the network method, numerous targets distributed in the work-volume are measured from multiple locations of the scanner to determine parameters of the scanner error model. In this paper, we propose a two-face method based on front-face and back-face measurements that can offer lower uncertainties for several model parameters. We also propose a length-consistency method to determine model parameters as a more efficient method of realizing the network method. We compare our two-face method, the length-consistency method, and the network method in terms of the uncertainties in the model parameters, and demonstrate the validity of our techniques using two-face and calibrated scale bar measurements. The clear advantage of these self-calibration methods is that reference instrument or calibrated artifacts are not required, thus significantly lowering the cost involved in the calibration process.
Wang, L.
, Muralikrishnan, B.
, Rachakonda, P.
and Sawyer, D.
(2017),
Determining geometric error model parameters of a terrestrial laser scanner through Two-face, Length-consistency, and Network methods, Measurement Science & Technology
(Accessed October 20, 2025)