Autonomous Service Drones for Multimodal Detection and Monitoring of Archaeological Sites
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- There must be a sufficient contrast between the thermal properties of the material of interest and those of the soil.
- The archaeological material below the surface must be close enough to the surface to be affected by heat flux.
- The thermal image must be acquired when the thermal differences are more pronounced as shown in Figure 2.
2. Literature Review
- Thermal conductivity: A physical property that measures the ability of an element to transmit heat (or infrared heat energy) through thermal conduction. That property depends on the nature of the material and is measured in watts per meter-kelvin (W/mK).
- Volumetric heat capacity: The property that defines the amount of heat energy that must be added to a unit of volume of a material to increase its temperature by one degree. This property depends on the density and composition of the material and is mostly, the reason, under the same light and temperature conditions, a stone will be warmer than the surrounding scattered ground.
- Thermal inertia: The property that describes the ability of a material to vary its temperature more or less quickly because of changing external conditions. A high thermal inertia value corresponds to a material that is slower in cooling or heating up as external thermal conditions change. Water, for example, has a high value of thermal inertia, for this reason, a moist soil will maintain a more constant temperature than a dry soil as external conditions vary. This property is directly proportional to the volumetric heat capacity of a material and inversely proportional to its thermal conductivity.
- Thermal emissivity: A physical quantity that measures the efficiency of a material to emit or reflect thermal radiation. This property, if noticeably different between two elements, allows a visible distinction from the thermal camera. For example, an accumulation of ceramic on the surface could be very visible in a thermal image, thanks to the different emissivity of the ceramic with respect to the surrounding soil [2,13].
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Drone-Based Archaeological Aerial Monitoring Challenges
3.2. Proposed Framework for Archaeological Aerial Monitoring
3.3. Proposed Multimodal Depth-RGB and Thermal-RGB Mosaicking Algorithm
3.4. Proposed Built Cultural Heritage Detection Algorithm
- -
- = x-axis centroid of the bounding box.
- -
- = y-axis centroid of the bounding box.
- -
- w = Width of the bounding box.
- -
- h = Height of the bounding box.
Data Generation
3.5. Cultural Heritage Structure Modeling
4. Validation and Results
4.1. Multimodal Depth-RGB and Thermal-RGB Mosaicking Algorithm Testing Results
4.2. Built Cultural Heritage Detection Algorithm Testing
4.3. End-to-End Integration Testing and Validation
4.4. Built Cultural Heritage Detection Using Photogrammetry Software
5. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Algorithm A1: Function to convert and resize the infrared images in Matlab |
Algorithm A2: Function to crop the RGB images in Matlab |
[2880 3840] |
Algorithm A3. Merging IR and RGB images using Matlab |
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Khelifi, A.; Ciccone, G.; Altaweel, M.; Basmaji, T.; Ghazal, M. Autonomous Service Drones for Multimodal Detection and Monitoring of Archaeological Sites. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 10424. https://doi.org/10.3390/app112110424
Khelifi A, Ciccone G, Altaweel M, Basmaji T, Ghazal M. Autonomous Service Drones for Multimodal Detection and Monitoring of Archaeological Sites. Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(21):10424. https://doi.org/10.3390/app112110424
Chicago/Turabian StyleKhelifi, Adel, Gabriele Ciccone, Mark Altaweel, Tasnim Basmaji, and Mohammed Ghazal. 2021. "Autonomous Service Drones for Multimodal Detection and Monitoring of Archaeological Sites" Applied Sciences 11, no. 21: 10424. https://doi.org/10.3390/app112110424