Abstract.
Nowadays, the surveillance and inspection of underwater installations, such as power and telecommunication cables and pipelines, is carried out by operators that, being on the surface, drive a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) with cameras mounted over it. This is a tedious and high time-consuming task, easily prone to errors mainly because of loss of attention or fatigue of the human operator. Besides, the complexity of the task is increased by the lack of quality of typical seabed images, which are mainly characterised by blurring, non-uniform illumination, lack of contrast and instability in the vehicle motion. In this study, the development of a vision system guiding an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) able to detect and track automatically an underwater power cable laid on the seabed is the main concern. The vision system that is proposed tracks the cable with an average success rate above 90%. The system has been tested using sequences coming from a video tape obtained in several tracking sessions of various real cables with a ROV driven from the surface. These cables were installed several years ago, so that the images do not present highly contrasted cables over a sandy seabed; on the contrary, these cables are partially covered in algae or sand, and are surrounded by other algae and rocks, thus making the sequences highly realistic.
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Accepted: 13 August 2001
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Ortiz, A., Simó, M. & Oliver, G. A vision system for an underwater cable tracker. Machine Vision and Applications 13, 129–140 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001380100065
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001380100065