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For more information about these courses, see the Department of Geomatics Engineering: .
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Geomatics Engineering
601
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Graduate Project
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Individual project in the student's area of specialization under the guidance of the student's supervisor. A written proposal, one or more written progress reports, and a final written report are required. An oral presentation is required upon completion of the course.
Course Hours:
3 units; (0-4)
Notes:
Open only to students in the course-based MEng.
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Geomatics Engineering
603
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Fundamentals of Infrastructure Asset Management and Sustainability
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International standards and guidelines in asset management and sustainable project delivery, effective consultation of stakeholders, the process of establishing asset management plans and inventories, and how these plans tie into ongoing performance monitoring, financial reporting and operational risk mitigation.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
605
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Advanced Topic in Asset Management - Strategy and Financial
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Development of strategic asset management plans and policies. Establishing organizational readiness and capacity for asset management. Assessing ISO 55 000 compliance and auditing asset management plans. Reconciling asset management forecasting with financial reporting. Principles of PSAB 3150, IRFS and GAAP. Accounting for natural assets and environmental, social and governance report impacts on asset management. Asset management frameworks and competency standards.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
610
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Geospatial Vision
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Covers relevant computer vision methods for solving mapping problems. Topics include 2D/3D interest points and feature descriptors, stereo and multi-view stereo, image alignment, 3D reconstruction, range data processing (pre-processing, segmentation and alignment), 3D modelling from point clouds, deep learning for mapping, map inference and map matching.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
612
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Wellbore Positioning in the Directional Drilling
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Theory, technique, and application of wellbore positioning in the directional drilling by using measurement-while-drilling (MWD) gravity, geomagnetic, and gyro sensors.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
615
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Advanced Physical Geodesy
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Potential theory and geodetic boundary value problems (GBVPs). Solution approaches to the Molodensky problem. Least-squares collocation (LSC). Hilbert spaces with kernel functions. Variational principles, improperly posed problems and regularization. The altimetry-gravimetry and overdetermined GBVPs. Solution of GBVPs by integral techniques, fast Fourier transforms and LSC. Use of heterogeneous data sets and noise propagation. Applications to gravity prediction, geoid determination, deflection estimation, satellite altimetry and airborne gravimetry and gradiometry. Current research activities.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
623
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Inertial Surveying and INS/GPS Integration
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Inertial sensors and their application in inertial navigation, existing inertial systems, new developments in strapdown technology. Practical aspects of inertial positioning definition of an operational inertial frame, inertial error models. Effect of inertial sensor errors on the derived navigation parameters, performance characteristics of inertial sensors, calibration of inertial sensors. Mechanization equations in different co-ordinate frames, step by step computation of the navigation parameters from the inertial sensor data introduction to Kalman filtering for optimal error estimation, modelling INS errors by linear state equations, practical issues for the implementation of update measurements (ZUPT, CUPT, Integrated systems), current research activities.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
625
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Advanced GNSS Theory and Applications
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Overview of space positioning and navigation systems; concepts and general description. Global Navigation Satellite System signal description. Receiver and antenna characteristics and capabilities; signal measurements indoor; GNSS error sources and biases; atmospheric delays, signal reflection and countermeasures. Mathematical models for static point and relative positioning. Kinematic single point and differential post mission and real time positioning, navigation and location. Augmentation methods. Land, marine, airborne and indoor applications. Case studies.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-2)
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Geomatics Engineering
629
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Advanced Estimation Methods and Analysis
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Introduction of different estimation criteria, error sources in estimation, modelling and testing requirements. Advanced least squares method, estimation equations and analysis. Random processes, dynamic models, Kalman filter equations and analysis. Implementation aspects. Concept of signal, least squares collocation equations and applications. Robust estimation principle and robustified least squares and Kalman filter. Data modelling issue in estimation, functional and stochastic model development for least squares and Kalman filter. Error analysis, conventional and robust statistical testing methods and analysis. Applications to geomatics engineering problems in geodesy, positioning and navigation, photogrammetry, etc.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
630
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Geodetic Monitoring of Geohazard and Geodynamics
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This course aims at providing a comprehensive knowledge of monitoring natural hazard (subsurface CO2 storage and oil sand field monitoring, earthquake, silent earthquake, artificial explosion, volcanic activity, faulting, landslide, tsunami, el niño, etc) and global geodynamics by modern geodetic and geophysical Earth observing techniques.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Also known as:
(formerly Geomatics Engineering 699.98 Spatio-Temporal Data Models)
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Geomatics Engineering
632
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Advanced Photogrammetric and Ranging Techniques
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Geometry and orientation of multi-image networks, self-calibrating bundle adjustment, direct versus indirect geo-referencing, 3D point cloud generation via structure-from-motion approaches, geometry of line cameras, principles of active imaging systems, mathematics of LiDAR mapping (registration and calibration), 3D point-cloud manipulation (feature extraction, segmentation and classification), photogrammetry and LiDAR data integration and fusion.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-2)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 531)
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Geomatics Engineering
633
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Atmospheric Effects on Satellite Navigation Systems
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Theoretical and observed aspects of radio wave propagation in the ionosphere and troposphere, with an emphasis on L-band (GPS) signals. Fundamentals of absorption, attenuation, depolarization, and defraction will be covered, in addition to characteristics and physical properties of the propagation medium and atmospheric constituents. The impact of such effects, and methods of mitigation, will be interpreted with respect to satellite navigation applications.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
637
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Earth Observation for the Environment
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An introduction to environmental earth observation systems in particular to satellite platforms. Topics include: discussion of physical principles, including governing equations; imaging system geometries; radiometric corrections, including calibration and atmospheric correction; spatial filtering for noise removal and information extraction; geometric corrections, including rectification and registration; fusion of multi-dimensional datasets (i.e., multi-spectral, multi-temporal, multi-resolution, and point-source ground data); and application of satellite images in addressing selected environmental issues.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Antirequisite(s):
Credit for Geomatics Engineering 637 and any of Geomatics Engineering 699.28 (Earth Observation for Environment), Environmental Engineering 619.05 (Earth Observation for the Environment) or 637 will not be allowed.
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Geomatics Engineering
638
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GNSS Receiver Design
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Global Navigation Satellite System signal structure, overview of receiver architecture, measurements, antenna design, receiver front-end, reference oscillator, sampling and quantization, phase lock loops, frequency lock loops and delay lock loops, tracking loop design and errors, signal acquisition and detection, interference effects.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2.5-1)
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Geomatics Engineering
639
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Advanced Topics in Digital Image Processing
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Review of basic digital imaging; advanced topics in multispectral or hyperspectral analysis, multiresolution analysis, image segmentation, image transform, data fusion, pattern recognition or feature matching; current research applications especially in Geomatics.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
641
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Design and Implementation of Geospatial Information Systems
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Overview of geographical information systems from a computing perspective. Topics include: fundamental database concepts; relational algebra, UML modelling, and SQL; fundamental spatial concepts; geometry, Euclidean space, topological space, set notations, point set topology, and base graph theory; models for geospatial information: object models and field models; Representations and Algorithms for GIS: computational complexity, discretization algorithms, topological data models and algorithms, TIN model, and computational geometry algorithms for GIS; spatial access methods: B-Tree, Quadtree, and R-Tree; and architectures; centralized and decentralized architectures.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-3)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 451)
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Geomatics Engineering
642
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Optical Imaging Metrology
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Optical imaging methods for precise close-range measurement. Photogrammetric techniques with emphasis on the bundle adjustment. Photogrammetric datum definition, network design and quality measures. Principles of laser range-finding and laser scanning. Imaging distortions, sensor modelling and system self-calibration for a variety of imaging sensors including digital cameras, panoramic cameras, 3D laser scanners and 3D range cameras. Automated point cloud processing methods; registration, modelling and segmentation. Selected case studies.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
645
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Spatial Databases and Data Mining
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Comprehensive overview of spatial database management systems and issues related to spatial data mining: spatial concepts and data models, spatial query languages, spatial storage and indexing, spatial networks and trends in spatial databases.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Notes:
Background in programming and statistics is required.
Also known as:
(Environmental Engineering 630)
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Geomatics Engineering
651
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Advanced Geospatial Topics
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Progress in research, development and applications in the field of geospatial technologies; importance of geospatial knowledge and evolution of geospatial technologies in the last decades; focus on six major geospatial technologies that characterize the so-called geospatial revolution; geoweb, virtual globes, volunteered geographic information, Location-based services, big data and geospatial cyber-infrastructure; data/product quality, privacy and confidentiality, and societal implication of these technologies will be discussed.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-2)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 551)
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Geomatics Engineering
656
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Hydrographic Surveying
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Water levels and flow. Underwater acoustics including velocity and system parameters. Sonar and echosounder systems. Acoustic positioning concepts. Vertical positioning and datums. Types of surveys and specifications. Practical examples and survey data processing.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-3)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 545)
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Geomatics Engineering
658
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Geocomputation
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Overview of the fudamental concepts, approaches, techniques, and applications in the field of Geocomputation: computational intelligence, complex systems theory, cellular automata modelling, multi-agent system modelling, calibration and validation of dynamic models, scale, artificial neural network, data mining and knowledge discovery, geovisualization, and post-normal science. Individual projects involving the application of Geocomputational techniques and models are conducted.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
659
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Digital Imaging and Applications
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An introduction to digital image processing (IP) and computer vision (CV) concepts, methods and algorithms which will enable the students to implement IP/CV systems or use IP/CV software with emphasis on applications and problem-solving in geomatics engineering including remote-sensing and photogrammetry and in other disciplines including energy and environment engineering. Course components include: image formation and intensity transformation, filtering in the spatial and frequency domain, colour image processing, feature detection and matching, image restoration, image segmentation, mathematical morphology and multi-source image/data fusion.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-2)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 559)
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Geomatics Engineering
664
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Data Analysis in Engineering
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Fundamentals of matrix theory, linear systems, probability and statistics. Data classification, analysis and bias identification. Random data acquisition, qualification and analysis. Least squares estimation and data analysis. Random process, stationarity test and kinematic modelling. Kalman filtering and real-time data analysis. Introduction to signal processing and time series analysis. Practical applications of data analysis and processing in geomatics engineering.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-2)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 563)
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Geomatics Engineering
681
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Advanced Global Geophysics and Geodynamics
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Elasticity, figure of the earth, earth structure and seismology, gravity and its temporal variations, isostasy, tides, earth rotation and orientation, time, plate flexure, glacial rebound, continental drift, geodetic observation methods for geodynamics.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Also known as:
(Geophysics 681)
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Geomatics Engineering
685
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Wireless Location
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Fundamentals of radio-frequency propagation, principles of radio-frequency positioning, observations and their associated error sources. Introduction to self-contained inertial sensors including odometers, gyros, accelerometers, and augmentation of RF methods with self-contained sensors and other data sources. Current systems: Assisted GPS, cellular telephone location techniques, pseudolites, location with wireless computer networks, ultra-wideband. Applications: outdoor and indoor personal location, asset tracking.
Course Hours:
3 units; (2-2)
Also known as:
(Geomatics Engineering 585)
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Geomatics Engineering
693
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Cadastral Information Systems
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Cadastral systems, cadastral data, land registration, data structures and schemas for land administration information, ISO standards, evolutionary models, land tools, effectiveness metrics.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
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Geomatics Engineering
694
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Advanced Topics in Sensor Web and Internet of Things
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Overview of the sensor web architecture and algorithms, with a focus on Internet of Things. Topics include: sensor web data management, sensor web search and discovery, sensor web server design and implementation, interoperability issues, sensor-based analytics and visualization, introduction to sensor networks, and trends in sensor web and Internet of Things.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Also known as:
(Environmental Engineering 639)
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Geomatics Engineering
697
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Directed Studies
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Individual project study conducted under the guidance of a faculty member and intended to familiarize the student with the literature and techniques that are required for their research program, but are not available in regular courses.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0)
Prerequisite(s):
Consent of the Department Head or Associate Head Graduate Studies.
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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Geomatics Engineering
699
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Special Studies
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Focus on advanced studies in specialized topics that are not offered in the regular graduate curriculum of the Department.
Course Hours:
3 units; (3-0) or (2-2)
MAY BE REPEATED FOR CREDIT
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