Drone2Map provides tools to identify points and measure the area of polygons, the length of features, and the volume of objects in your images. You can change the default units of measurement in the Mensuration Results window before or after performing measurements.
Note:
Keep the following in mind when measuring:- The quality of your measurement results depends on the quality of the ground control points used when processing your images. See the Control topic for best practices using ground control in your projects.
- Measurements are calculated using the Digital Surface Model. To activate the mensuration tools, process a Digital Surface Model and add it to the map.
Make a measurement
To measure a point, distance, area, or volume of features in your images, follow the steps for each type of measurement.
Point
The Point tool identifies the location of a point. To identify a point feature, complete the following steps:
- On the Analysis tab, in the Measure gallery, click the Point tool.
- Click a point on the image.
Distance
The Distance tool measures the distance between two or more points. To measure distance or length of features in your images, complete the following steps:
- On the Analysis tab, in the Measure gallery, click the Distance tool.
- Click two or more points along the feature you're measuring.
- Double-click the last point to stop measuring.
Area
The Area tool calculates the area and perimeter of a feature. To measure an area on the map, complete the following steps:
- On the Analysis tab, in the Measure gallery, click the Area tool.
- Click three or more points along the feature you're measuring.
- Double-click the last point to stop measuring.
Volume
Volume of features can be measured from any georeferenced raster dataset, mosaic dataset, or image service composed of an elevation surface such as a digital surface model (DSM) or digital terrain model (DTM). Draw a polygon around the feature to calculate and display cut and fill volumes on the map, in the Results pane, and in the mensuration report.
You can measure the volume of objects in a DSM or DTM using the Volume tool . If you have a choice of elevation surface types for your area of interest, it is recommended that you use a DSM, which best represents the elevation of features above the ground.
Base surface
The volume measurement is calculated from a reference surface determined by the polygon delineating the object you want to measure. The reference surface—called the base surface—can be created using any of the following Base Surface options: Cut and fill volumes are calculated from the difference between the digitized feature and the defined base surface. Ground features below the base surface result in fill values, and above ground features result in cut values. The total volume measurement is cut value + fill value.
Note:
The raster layer used as a backdrop for digitizing your features of interest can be a multispectral image, thematic, an elevation surface, or other type of supported raster dataset. The only requirement is that features and objects digitized in the layer must be represented in the elevation dataset to obtain accurate volume measurements. This is because the volume measurement is calculated using the elevation surface dataset defined in the Mensuration Options pane.Collect a volume measurement
To collect a volume measurement of a feature in an image, complete the following steps:
- On the Analysis tab, in the Measure gallery, click the Volume tool.
- Digitize a polygon around the feature of interest by clicking vertices and double-clicking to close the polygon.
This polygon is used to define the base surface and the object for volumetric measurement.
If you use an elevation surface dataset as the backdrop for digitizing objects for volumetric measurement, it is recommended that you render it as a hillshade layer. This helps you distinguish your features of interest in more detail for better digitizing.
Mensuration Results pane
The results from each measurement are listed in the Mensuration Results pane. To open the pane, on the Analysis tab, in the Measure group, click Results. The following properties are included for each measurement:
- Type—The type of measurement can be point, distance, area, or volume.
- Name—Defaults are sequential for each type of measurement.
- Description—User-defined text description for each measurement.
- Time of measurement—The time of the volume measurement, defined as month/day/year h:mm:ss AM/PM.
Each type of measurement includes the following unique information about the respective type when selected in the Mensuration Results pane:
- Point—The x,y,z coordinates of the point measurement
- Distance—Total distance of the measurement and distance of each segment in multisegment measurements
- Area
- Area—2D area of the polygon, in the units selected, such as square meters
- Perimeter—Linear measurement of the polygon, in the units selected, such as meters
- Volume
- Total Volume—Calculated as cut + fill, in the units selected, such as cubic meters
- Cut—Cut volume of above base surface features, in the units selected, such as cubic meters
- Fill—Fill volume of below base surface features, in the units selected, such as cubic meters
- Area—2D area of the polygon, in the units selected, such as square meters
- Perimeter—Linear measurement of the polygon, in the units selected, such as meters
Note:
If you make volume measurements in Drone2Map, the error of the calculation is also reported. The error is calculated in the following manner:
Cut Volume error = <number of cut cells> * 1.5 * Ground Sample Distance³
Fill Volume error = <number of fill cells> * 1.5 * GSD³
Total Volume error = Cut Volume error + Fill Volume error
Mensuration options
To choose the units for each measurement type, click the Mensuration Options button in the upper right corner of the Mensuration Results pane. Additionally, you can edit symbols and colors for the measurement types.
The Level of Precision value determines the number of decimal places for the specified units; the default value is four decimal places. Select a value between 1–12.
If you create both a DSM and DTM, you can set the Elevation surface dataset to calculate the volume measurement.
The Base Surface option allows you to specify a method for determining the base surface reference. Click the drop-down arrow to select from the following options:
- Constant—Uses a user-defined value to define a flat base surface
- Interpolate—Uses the z-value at each vertex in your sketch to interpolate a base surface for the volume calculation
- Minimum—Uses the minimum z-value from the sketch vertices to define a flat base surface at the minimum elevation
- Maximum—Uses the maximum z-value from the sketch vertices to define a flat base surface at the maximum elevation
- Mean—Uses the mean z-value from the sketch vertices to define a flat base surface at the mean elevation
Save your measurements
The measurement types are saved in the project's geodatabase as the appropriate feature classes. For example, point measurements are saved as a point feature class, distance measurements are saved as a polyline feature class, and area and volume measurements are saved as a polygon feature class. The location and feature class type is handled in the project file, so there is no need to locate or manage these files.
Measurements are saved when you save or exit the project. When the project file is loaded, the saved measurements are also loaded and available for viewing or editing in the Mensuration Results pane. The measurements are linked via the attribute table of the feature class to the appropriate source file.
Note:
Changing the default location of the project's geodatabase file may cause existing measurements to disappear from the Mensuration Results pane.
Mensuration report
You can generate and save a report listing your measurements. Click the Generate Report button in the Mensuration Results pane and name and save your report. All selected measurements in the Mensuration Results pane are written to a text file. If no results are selected, all measurements for the map are written to the report.
The following information is recorded for each measurement:
- Measurement name—The name of the measurement in the map
- Type of measurement—The identification of the measurement as a point, distance, area, or volume measurement
- Measurement result—The results of your measurement in the map, in the units specified
- Description—The description you added to the measurement data
- Time of measurement—The time the measurement was collected