Author_Institution :
Dept. of Math., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
Abstract :
Structure from motion (SFM) is the problem of recovering the geometry of a scene from a stream of images taken from unknown viewpoints. One popular approach to estimate the geometry of a scene is to track scene features on several images and reconstruct their position in 3-D. During this process, the unknown camera pose must also be recovered. Unfortunately, recovering the pose can be an ill-conditioned problem which, in turn, can make the SFM problem difficult to solve accurately. We propose an alternative formulation of the SFM problem with fixed internal camera parameters known a priori. In this formulation, obtained by algebraic variable elimination, the external camera pose parameters do not appear. As a result, the problem is better conditioned in addition to involving much fewer variables. Variable elimination is done in three steps. First, we take the standard SFM equations in projective coordinates and eliminate the camera orientations from the equations. We then further eliminate the camera center positions. Finally, we also eliminate all 3-D point positions coordinates, except for their depths with respect to the camera center, thus obtaining a set of simple polynomial equations of degree two and three. We show that, when there are merely a few points and pictures, these “depth-only equations” can be solved in a global fashion using homotopy methods. We also show that, in general, these same equations can be used to formulate a pose-free cost function to refine SFM solutions in a way that is more accurate than by minimizing the total reprojection error, as done when using the bundle adjustment method. The generalization of our approach to the case of varying internal camera parameters is briefly discussed.
Keywords :
image motion analysis; image reconstruction; polynomials; pose estimation; tracking; algebraic variable elimination; bundle adjustment method; depth-only equations; fixed internal camera parameters; geometry estimation; geometry recovering; homotopy method; ill-conditioned problem; image reconstruction; motion constraints; polynomial equation; pose-free cost function; pose-free structure; scene feature tracking; structure from motion; unknown camera pose recovering; Barium; Cameras; Cost function; Mathematical model; Polynomials; Three dimensional displays; Numerical conditioning; structure from motion; variable elimination;