Digital Elevation Model - DEM, DSM or DTM

DEM, DSM or DTM

There is no common usage of the terms digital elevation model (DEM), digital terrain model (DTM) and digital surface model (DSM) in scientific literature. In the most cases the term digital surface model represents the earth's surface and includes all objects on it. In contrast to a DSM, the digital terrain model represents the bare ground surface without any objects like plants and buildings (see the figure on the right).

The term Digital Elevation Model is often used as a generic term for DSMs and DTMs, only representing height information without any further definition about the surface. Other definitions equalise the terms DEM and DTM, or define the DEM as a subset of the DTM, which is also representing other morphological elements. There are also definitions which equalise the terms DEM and DSM. In the Web definitions can be found which define the DEM as a digital regularly spaced GRID and a DTM as a real three-dimensional model (TIN). Most of the data providers (USGS, ERSDAC, CGIAR, Spot Image ) use the term DEM as a generic term for DSMs and DTMs. All datasets which are captured with satellites, airplanes or other flying platforms are originally DSMs (like SRTM or the ASTER GDEM). It is possible to compute a DTM from high resolution DSM datasets with complex algorithms (Li et al., 2005). In the following the term DEM is used as a generic term for DSMs and DTMs.

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