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I'm trying to create a panoramic image using opencv library. Based on this, I need to warp the image to cylindrical coordinates. I got the formula to convert 3D cartesian (X,Y,Z) to cylindrical coordinate(θ,v) from Panoramic Image Mosaic paper , which is:

  θ = tan−1 (X/Z)

  v = Y/ √ (X^2 + Z^2)

I have read an opencv mailing list thread about cylindrical image warping, but based on the paper, I don't think I need to use camera calibration matrix. And, in the website, the problem has not been solved. Th question is, how can we convert an opencv IplImage to cylindrical coordinate and display them correctly?

Thanks in advance.

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  • did you solve your porblem? Oct 9, 2016 at 14:27

2 Answers 2

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Unfortunately, you do need the camera calibration if you wish to warp an image from Cartesian to cylindrical coordinates.

Think about it. If the camera is not calibrated, then you do not know what is the field of view of the camera. If you do not the field of view, then you can not map pixels to optical rays. If you do not know the optical ray which corresponds to your pixel, there's no way to express that pixel in cylindrical coordinates.

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  • It seems that i need to study more about camera calibration in opencv for now. Thank you.
    – fatarms
    Dec 21, 2010 at 0:31
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If you have enough images with enough overlap (>90%-95%) you can skip the calibration by taking narrow vertical slices from the middle of each image and stitching those together. Depending on the steadiness of your camera work you might need to correct for vertical and rotational movement of the camera between images by matching on the overlapping parts. If you have a very good lens you can get away with less overlap.

This article is a good starting point.

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