CVJan 29

Urban Neural Surface Reconstruction from Constrained Sparse Aerial Imagery with 3D SAR Fusion

arXiv:2601.22045v1h-index: 5
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the critical issue of geometric ambiguity in large-scale urban remote sensing where aerial image acquisition is constrained by flight paths, terrain, and cost, representing an incremental advance in cross-modal 3D reconstruction.

The paper tackles the problem of neural surface reconstruction from sparse aerial imagery in urban environments by fusing 3D synthetic aperture radar (SAR) point clouds with aerial imagery, resulting in enhanced reconstruction accuracy, completeness, and robustness under highly sparse and oblique-view conditions.

Neural surface reconstruction (NSR) has recently shown strong potential for urban 3D reconstruction from multi-view aerial imagery. However, existing NSR methods often suffer from geometric ambiguity and instability, particularly under sparse-view conditions. This issue is critical in large-scale urban remote sensing, where aerial image acquisition is limited by flight paths, terrain, and cost. To address this challenge, we present the first urban NSR framework that fuses 3D synthetic aperture radar (SAR) point clouds with aerial imagery for high-fidelity reconstruction under constrained, sparse-view settings. 3D SAR can efficiently capture large-scale geometry even from a single side-looking flight path, providing robust priors that complement photometric cues from images. Our framework integrates radar-derived spatial constraints into an SDF-based NSR backbone, guiding structure-aware ray selection and adaptive sampling for stable and efficient optimization. We also construct the first benchmark dataset with co-registered 3D SAR point clouds and aerial imagery, facilitating systematic evaluation of cross-modal 3D reconstruction. Extensive experiments show that incorporating 3D SAR markedly enhances reconstruction accuracy, completeness, and robustness compared with single-modality baselines under highly sparse and oblique-view conditions, highlighting a viable route toward scalable high-fidelity urban reconstruction with advanced airborne and spaceborne optical-SAR sensing.

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