Road surface inspection using laser scanners adapted for the high precision 3D measurements of large flat surfaces

Author(s):  
J. Laurent ◽  
M. Talbot ◽  
M. Doucet
Author(s):  
Naoko FUKUSHI ◽  
Daishiro KOBAYASHI ◽  
Seiji IWAO ◽  
Ryosuke KASAHARA ◽  
Nobuyoshi YABUKI

2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (20) ◽  
pp. 111-129
Author(s):  
Artur Plichta ◽  
Adam Piasecki

Within the road investments the very important element determining repeatedly the success of the whole project is an adequate information about the characteristics of the site, its load capacity, stability and the possible impact of geological characteristics that may interfere with subsequent service life, not only for the road surface itself, but also for the surrounded objects. The surface is incessantly influenced by geological characteristics, determining its durability and functional usefulness. The main aim of this paper is to answer the question how by the usage of modern technics for obtaining data it is possible to find a link confirming the characteristics of land on which the specific road projects are supposed to be carried out, or where these projects have already been accomplished, concerning their requirements with high accuracy of location and also the stability and durability of the ground. This article makes also an attempt to answer not only the question how to identify the construction of road surface, but also how to locate underground cavities, created or influenced by the flow of water, or due to geological structures characterized as an inconsistent ground. The results were supported with geophysical researches using GPR method, and also data collected with laser scanners.


Mechatronics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 59-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Sharifzadeh ◽  
Istvan Biro ◽  
Niels Lohse ◽  
Peter Kinnell

Author(s):  
L. Yao ◽  
C. Qin ◽  
Q. Chen ◽  
H. Wu ◽  
S. Zhang

Abstract. At present, automatic driving technology has become one of the development direction of the future intelligent transportation system. The high high-precision map, which is an important supplement of the on on-board sensors under the condition of shielding or the restriction of observation distance, provides a priori information for high high-precision positioning and path planning of the automatic driving with the level of L3 and above. The position and semantic information of the road markings, such as the absolute coordinates of th e solid line and the bro ken line, are the basic components of the high high-precision map. At present, point cloud data are still one of the most important data source of the high high-precision map. So, how to get road markings information from original point clouds automatically deserve study. In this paper, point cloud is sliced by the mileage of the road, then each slice is projected onto respective vertical section section. Random Sample Consensus (RANSAC) algorithm is applied to establish road surface buffer area . Finally, moving window filtering is used to extract road surface point cloud from road surface buffer area area. On this basis, the road surface point cloud image is transformed into raster image with a certain resolution by using the method of inverse distance weighted interpolation , and the grid image is converted into binary image by using the method of adaptive threshold segmentation based on the integral graph. Then the method of the Euclidean clustering is used to extract the road markings point cloud from the binary image. Characteristic attribute detection is applied to recognize solid line marking from all clusters. Deep learning network framework pointnet++ is applied to recognize remain road markings including guideline, broken line, straight arrow, and right turn arrow.


Author(s):  
Xiang Jiao ◽  
Jianqiang Zhu ◽  
Quantang Fan ◽  
Yangshuai Li

To establish the mechanism of surface change in a continuous polishing system, an ideal mathematical model is built based on Winkler’s hypothesis and the Preston equation. The basic features of the model are the change rates in the surface peak–valley (PV) values of the workpiece, conditioning disk and pitch lap, rather than the specific surface shapes. In addition, an equilibrium state exists in the system, indicating that the surface change rates are all zero. Under equilibrium, the surface of the lap could remain flat, and it is insensitive to the surface error of the workpiece. These characteristics lay the theoretical foundations for high-efficiency and high-precision polishing. The methods to obtain an equilibrium state with flat surfaces are then proposed and confirmed experimentally. High-precision surfaces better than $\frac{{\it\lambda}}{10}~({\it\lambda}=632.8~\text{nm})$ are consistently produced experimentally.


Author(s):  
Michael Kühnel ◽  
Enrico Langlotz ◽  
Ilko Rahneberg ◽  
Denis Dontsov ◽  
Jürgen Probst ◽  
...  

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