Mobile Mappers: Features and Applications29/12/2005 |
| Small, Portable and Accurate Devices for GIS Input |
| Mobile Mapping devices are a typical result of the on-going miniaturisation of instruments enabled by chip technology and electronics which result in small, handy, portable and accurate GPS tools that can be used hand in hand with survey instruments. Their many beneficial features potentially pave the way to success through adoption by a rapidly expanding GIS market. The author highlights characteristics of Mobile Mapping Devices and considers their application. |
| Mathias Lemmens, GIM International and Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands |
|
Geo-ICT professionals have over the course of time developed many advanced methods for storing, retrieving, processing and disseminating over the Web impressive amounts of geo-information. These developments in GIS technology have often been the subject of articles in this journal. Reading all these stories as a land surveyor sometimes leads to odd feelings popping up. Nice technology, one remarks to oneself, but what about the data? Who should be collecting it all? Which devices are actually capable of producing such huge amounts of data? And does a GIS user not care about the quality of the data he/she uses and the quality of the geo-information ultimately produced? GIS users are beginning to see that the demand for accurate, detailed and timely geo-data is increasing alongside the increasing use of GIS throughout all sectors of the economy. The surveying world recognises the needs of the GIS user and is continually looking for ways in which the latest technology can be employed to serve them. One spin-off of all this is the mobile mapper.
Further issues concern whether the display is full-colour and readable in daylight, whether the battery can be charged from a vehicle or replaced in the field, and if it can last a whole working day. Double Terminology Communication among professionals requires a proper set of terms to identify equipment and specify methods. Accordingly, the introduction of new products and tools is usually associated with novel terms. The choice of a proper term is one issue, but a bigger one is that manufacturers may develop the same technology simultaneously whilst introducing differing terms. On the other hand, two different devices may be given the same name. This is the case with the term ‘mobile mapper’. In European countries the prefix mobile is a use-driven term chosen in analogy to mobile phone: compact, handheld devices which can be easily carried around. In the US, where such phones are referred to not as ‘mobile’ but as ‘cellular’ (a technology-driven term referring to the type of network necessary for wireless communication), the word ‘mobile’ refers to the mobility of a platform carrying surveying equipment. More particularly, it implies a van equipped with GPS, IMU, digital stereo cameras and laser scanners and able to determine real-time or, after post-processing, 3D position of features of interest found on and along the route. Sometimes a manufacturer may even be so happy with the choice of a term that he decides to register the name as a trademark (TM), as Thales did with the MobileMapper. Crucial Accuracy For many applications, such as mapping pipe-lines, good accuracy is crucial. The achievable accuracy of a mobile mapper does not depend so much on the device itself but more on the chosen GPS infrastructure support. When no use is made of any such support, so that one is operating in the stand-alone mode, accuracy is usually limited to about 3 metres. But by making use of various types of differential GPS, as supported by national or continent-wide GPS services, accuracies at sub-metre and even decimetre level are achievable. So accuracy depends mainly on what is paid for in terms of infrastructure services or, in some parts of the world, on the availability of these. Tool for the Surveyor Many land surveyors today use Mobile Mapping Devices to ease their lives. For example, the survey department of Lawton, Oklahoma, US, has been using them now for about two years for carrying out boundary surveying, GIS data-gathering for departments of public works, infrastructure and others, and geographic management of all survey and engineering data. Both for mapping and updating, the mobile device enables up to tenfold reductions in surveying time as compared to conventional methods. Using a base-station allows sub-foot accuracy 99% of the time in post-processing. So that Mobile Mapping Devices can be real time-savers for the land surveyor, whilst also offering good accuracy. And on the Bike Recreational biking is a popular leisure activity in The Netherlands. The Royal Dutch Touring Club (ANWB) in Den Haag has grouped together into sign-posted bicycle routes many roads leading through attractive landscapes. At the junctions of these, forming a still-expanding network covering the entire country, are placed signs and information boards. A database has been created containing information on routes, signs and boards. The field collection of this data has been done using Thales MobileMapper. To assist the field staff, a coding library containing all relevant details of place, route, area and other applicable features were loaded into MobileMapper Pro prior to data collection. After using Rinex to post-process data available from the AGRS stations (Dutch Cadastre Stations - Apeldoorn), the positional accuracy of all features lies within 70 centimetres. Further processing and analysis of data is done in ESRI’s Arcview. Unmapped Terrain The above examples refer to terrain of which maps have been produced at feasible scales. However, in many countries, large and medium-scale maps have either never been made or, if in better times they have been produced, perhaps half a century ago, they have since become desperately outdated and are hence of very little practical value. The suitability of Mobile Mapping Devices for use in unmapped terrain was demonstrated during bathymetric survey of the Senegal River in June 2004; with a length of 1,800km, the river flows west from Mali to form the border between Senegal and Mauritania. An essential prerequisite for bathymetric surveys is a map of the vicinity of the river. Mobile Mapping Devices proved themselves a good replacement for non-existent maps. Two crews drew the map of the river digitally, one day at a time, collecting data along the riverbanks and working one day ahead of the bathymetric survey vessels. At the end of each day data was downloaded in SHP format for use next day by the hydrographers. The outline of the riverbank was mapped at the rate of 80km per day. Other applications fields where Mobile Mapping Devices may be of great help are in:
Acknowledgement The support of Thales Navigation in providing examples of applications is thankfully acknowledged. |
| Biography of the Author(s) Dr Mathias Lemmens is editor of GIM International, holds a post as assistant professor at the Delft University of Technology and is currently engaged as an EU GIS/Mapping adviser. |


