M3C2 core points and direction of distances/normals
Posted: Fri Jan 13, 2017 6:31 am
Hi Daniel and Dimitri,
I'm using M3C2 plugin to compare a series of point clouds, and so far I've been satisfied with M3C2 results compared to C2C. I should mention that I read the corresponding publication in which M3C2 algorithm was applied to the Rangitikei canyon point clouds. However, I have a couple of questions with regards to M3C2 use.
1) For two point clouds, each with the resolution of 5cm, guess parameters were D=6.16m, d= 0.823m, L=58m and dx=0.421m. However, If I choose D= 0.5-10m with 1m interval, d=2m, L=10m (knowing that there's no feature on site that is 58m high or wide), and dx=0.4 m, am I on the safer side compared to what the software guessed?
2) For the direction of normals I used +Z, does that mean that the computed distances will also be in Z direction? If yes, is there an option with the normal direction menu to compute net distances?
3) Keeping all other parameters constant, I varied dx from 0.8, 0.7, 0.6...0.2m, however, there was no significant difference between the calculated distance from 0.5 to 0.2m. From the perspective of saving computation time without affecting the accuracy of results, does that mean dx= 0.5 or 0.4m is enough to get accurate results.
Regards,
Asghar
I'm using M3C2 plugin to compare a series of point clouds, and so far I've been satisfied with M3C2 results compared to C2C. I should mention that I read the corresponding publication in which M3C2 algorithm was applied to the Rangitikei canyon point clouds. However, I have a couple of questions with regards to M3C2 use.
1) For two point clouds, each with the resolution of 5cm, guess parameters were D=6.16m, d= 0.823m, L=58m and dx=0.421m. However, If I choose D= 0.5-10m with 1m interval, d=2m, L=10m (knowing that there's no feature on site that is 58m high or wide), and dx=0.4 m, am I on the safer side compared to what the software guessed?
2) For the direction of normals I used +Z, does that mean that the computed distances will also be in Z direction? If yes, is there an option with the normal direction menu to compute net distances?
3) Keeping all other parameters constant, I varied dx from 0.8, 0.7, 0.6...0.2m, however, there was no significant difference between the calculated distance from 0.5 to 0.2m. From the perspective of saving computation time without affecting the accuracy of results, does that mean dx= 0.5 or 0.4m is enough to get accurate results.
Regards,
Asghar