UAV-Assisted Image Acquisition: 3D UAV Trajectory Design and Camera Control
This work provides an incremental improvement for optimizing UAV image acquisition efficiency for remote sensing and surveillance applications.
This paper addresses the problem of optimizing UAV trajectories for oblique image acquisition of multiple ground targets. The proposed iterative algorithm significantly reduces the UAV's traveling distance compared to benchmark schemes while satisfying image resolution constraints.
In this paper, we consider a new unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-assisted oblique image acquisition system where a UAV is dispatched to take images of multiple ground targets (GTs). To study the three-dimensional (3D) UAV trajectory design for image acquisition, we first propose a novel UAV-assisted oblique photography model, which characterizes the image resolution with respect to the UAV's 3D image-taking location. Then, we formulate a 3D UAV trajectory optimization problem to minimize the UAV's traveling distance subject to the image resolution constraints. The formulated problem is shown to be equivalent to a modified 3D traveling salesman problem with neighbourhoods, which is NP-hard in general. To tackle this difficult problem, we propose an iterative algorithm to obtain a high-quality suboptimal solution efficiently, by alternately optimizing the UAV's 3D image-taking waypoints and its visiting order for the GTs. Numerical results show that the proposed algorithm significantly reduces the UAV's traveling distance as compared to various benchmark schemes, while meeting the image resolution requirement.