Manuel Sanchez-Gestido

h-index19
2papers

2 Papers

CVOct 20, 2025
Adapting Stereo Vision From Objects To 3D Lunar Surface Reconstruction with the StereoLunar Dataset

Clementine Grethen, Simone Gasparini, Geraldine Morin et al.

Accurate 3D reconstruction of lunar surfaces is essential for space exploration. However, existing stereo vision reconstruction methods struggle in this context due to the Moon's lack of texture, difficult lighting variations, and atypical orbital trajectories. State-of-the-art deep learning models, trained on human-scale datasets, have rarely been tested on planetary imagery and cannot be transferred directly to lunar conditions. To address this issue, we introduce LunarStereo, the first open dataset of photorealistic stereo image pairs of the Moon, simulated using ray tracing based on high-resolution topography and reflectance models. It covers diverse altitudes, lighting conditions, and viewing angles around the lunar South Pole, offering physically grounded supervision for 3D reconstruction tasks. Based on this dataset, we adapt the MASt3R model to the lunar domain through fine-tuning on LunarStereo. We validate our approach through extensive qualitative and quantitative experiments on both synthetic and real lunar data, evaluating 3D surface reconstruction and relative pose estimation. Extensive experiments on synthetic and real lunar data validate the approach, demonstrating significant improvements over zero-shot baselines and paving the way for robust cross-scale generalization in extraterrestrial environments.

CVJul 1, 2025
Enabling Robust, Real-Time Verification of Vision-Based Navigation through View Synthesis

Marius Neuhalfen, Jonathan Grzymisch, Manuel Sanchez-Gestido

This work introduces VISY-REVE: a novel pipeline to validate image processing algorithms for Vision-Based Navigation. Traditional validation methods such as synthetic rendering or robotic testbed acquisition suffer from difficult setup and slow runtime. Instead, we propose augmenting image datasets in real-time with synthesized views at novel poses. This approach creates continuous trajectories from sparse, pre-existing datasets in open or closed-loop. In addition, we introduce a new distance metric between camera poses, the Boresight Deviation Distance, which is better suited for view synthesis than existing metrics. Using it, a method for increasing the density of image datasets is developed.