Category:Micmac

From mn/geo/geoit
Revision as of 15:33, 21 October 2016 by Lucg@uio.no (talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search


Introduction

NB : MicMac has it's own wiki [1]

MicMac is a free open-source (Cecill-B licence) photogrammetric suite that can be used in a variety of 3D reconstruction scenarios. In aims mainly at professional or academic users but constant efforts are made to make it more accessible to the general public.

One of MicMac strengths is its high degree of versatility. It can indeed be used in various fields : cartography, environment, industry, forestry, heritage, archaeology,...

MicMac allows both the creation of 3D models and of ortho-imagery when appropriate.

The software is suitable to every type of objects of any scale : from small object or statues with acquisition from the ground, to church, castle through drone acquisitions, to buildings, cities or natural areas through aerial or satellite acquisitions. The tools also allow for the georeferencing of the end products in local/global/absolute coordinates system. Some complementary tools opens the fields of metrology and site surveying.

Examples

These are some examples of surveys were MicMac was used for the processing.

Digitizing the castle of Chambord

Two survey campaigns of two weeks were organised in Chambord castle during the autumns of 2014 and 2015 in order to digitize this national heritage monument. These surveys were conducted by students of the ENSG PPMD master as educational fieldwork. The following methods were used there : laser scanning, photogrammetry, topography, geodesy, remote sensing, etc... The student have for example surveyed the fronts of the castle :

x200px
x200px
x200px
x200px

3D modelization of Mourres site

Here are some results from a project made by ENSG students, at Forcalquier. Ground acquisition and from UAV. Photogrametric workflow was made on Micmac, and the layout on QGIS.

x200px x200px x200px
x250px x250px
{{#ev:youtube|https://youtu.be/es3RByteOu0%7C500x300px}}

This category currently contains no pages or media.