Asian Surveying & Mapping
Breaking News
Ecolab and ITE partners to harness water management knowledge for Singapore data center engineers
SINGAPORE, 29 APRIL 2024 – Nalco Water, an Ecolab...
NASA releases satellite photos of Dubai and Abu Dhabi before and after record flooding
NASA released photos of parts of Dubai and Abu...
Singapore releases 10-year Geospatial Master Plan
Singapore has launched its new Geospatial Master Plan (2024–33),...
Japan announces plans to launch upgraded observation satellites on new flagship rocket’s 3rd flight
TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s space agency announced Friday a...
Tesla China partners with Baidu for maps to clear FSD hurdle
Amidst Elon Musk’s unannounced trip to Beijing, China this...
ESA opens ideas factory to boost space innovation in Austria
A centre to innovate the design and manufacture of...
Japan’s space agency sets June 30 as third launch date for H3 rocket
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced Friday that...
S. Korea launches nanosatellite for Earth observation
SEOUL- A South Korean nanosatellite was launched into orbit...
Australian Space Agency funds development of aerospace-grade GNSS receiver
The Australian Space Agency has funded the development of...
Continuity risks for Australian EO data access
A new report details the widespread use of Earth...

October 18th, 2018
Leica Geosystems Increases Efficiency with Hydrographic Survey Systems Upgrade

(Heerbrugg, Switzerland – 18 October 2018) – Leica Geosystems, part of Hexagon, announced today the availability of Leica Chiroptera 4X and Leica HawkEye 4X. The latest upgrades introduce a new bathymetric LiDAR high resolution technology that increase the bathymetric point density by a factor four.

The higher point density allows customers to deliver high resolution products at reduced operational costs. Flight cost savings of 50 per cent can be achieved for typical bathymetric LiDAR end user specifications. The depth penetration increases up to 10 per cent with the new technology while not affecting the turbid water performance or accuracy.

Nova Scotia Community College is validating the new Chiroptera 4X bathymetric high-resolution technology in test projects on Canada’s east coast in turbid water conditions. “The four times increased resolution dramatically improves our ability to detect objects, even on the scale of features 1 metre by 1 metre where the increased number of points can be used to further clarify the objects location and details. For vegetation mapping, the increased resolution of the sensor provides us an unprecedented level of detail related to vegetation and other materials on the seafloor. We have also detected new seabed features not discovered from previous bathy LiDAR surveys in the same area, which indicates an increased sensitivity of the solution,” said Tim Webster, research scientist, Applied Geomatics Research Group (AGRG) Centre of Geographic Sciences (COGS), Nova Scotia Community College.

The 4X technology is available as an upgrade package to all current Chiroptera II and HawkEye III customers and will be integrated in all new bathymetric LiDAR systems. The improved resolution, depth penetration and accuracy provide substantial benefit for environmental and coastal monitoring, inland waters mapping, infrastructure planning, and near-shore applications.

Maximising efficiency

Typical end user specifications require two to four points per square metre for the highest quality level shallow bathymetric LiDAR data. This is easily achieved with a single flight line with the new Chiroptera 4X or HawkEye 4X shallow channel, while in previous generation double coverage was needed. This improvement saves half of the flight costs alone.

With the depth penetration of 2.7/k and collection of 140,000 points per second of the Chiroptera or HawkEye shallow channel, the new 4X technology offers an unmatched shallow water performance in respect to point density, turbid water performance and depth penetration. For the HawkEye deep channel, the 40,000 points per second collection is market leading in the industry and can easily deliver IHO order 1B data from single flight line.

“Optimising a bathymetric LiDAR system has always been a trade-off between sensitivity (depth penetration) and resolution. Our new 4X high-resolution technology allows us to improve both those parameters without any tradeoffs,” said Anders Ekelund, Hexagon’s Geospatial Content Solutions vice-president of Airborne Bathymetric LiDAR. “Performing advanced high-density site surveying allows users to extract better details for both above-water and underwater features, increasing our knowledge of coastal and inland waterways and habitats.”

For more information, please visit: https://leica-geosystems.com/products/airborne-systems/bathymetric-lidar-sensors