AmesStereoPipeline,NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline,NASA’s Open Source Automated Stereogrammetry Software Zachary M.Moratto1,Michael J.Broxton1,Ross A.Beyer2,1,Mike Lundy1,and Kyle Husmann3, 1NASA Ames Research Center,MS269-3,Moffett Field,CA,USA,2Carl Sagan Center at the SETI Institute,and 3...
The NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline is a suite of free and open source automated geodesy and stereogrammetry tools designed for processing stereo images captured from satellites (around Earth and other planets), robotic rovers, aerial cameras, and historical images, with and without accurate camera pose ...
To create the elevation maps, a team at Ames is using NASA’s open source Stereo Pipeline software tool as well as the processing power of Ames’ Pleiades supercomputer to layer thousands of satellite images taken by cameras aboard theLunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. Engineers are pairing these...
Developing software that allows humans on Earth to operate a panoply of unmanned explorers is no small task, and it’s one undertaken jointly by JPL, the Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, and the Johnson Space Center in Houston. They face problems like efficient mission planning, parsing...
A forthcoming case study fromAtlassianlooks atEnsemble, a project jointly developed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, CA and the Ames Research Center near San Francisco. It’s described by the space agency as: “a platform for the development, integration, and deployment ...
The NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline (ASP) is a suite of free and open source automated geodesy and stereogrammetry tools designed for processing stereo images captured from satellites (around Earth and other planets), robotic rovers, aerial cameras, and historical images, with and without accurate camera...
have completed only one module: the NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline, but more will soon follow. Check this website for the latest updates. B. Stereo Pipeline The NASA Ames Stereo Pipeline (ASP) is a suite of automated geodesy & stereogrammetry tools designed for processing planetary imagery captured...