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Homeland Security - High
Resolution Camera from Imperx
Imperx Camera in UAV
Imperx (Boca Raton, FL, USA; www.imperx.com) has developed
a prototype Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) that integrates
vision, global positioning, and infrared (IR) technology.
The system incorporates an off-the-shelf camera, data
transceiver, GPS system, and a custom frame grabber
and CPU. It is designed to operate within the payload
compartment of a UAV. To capture images from the aircraft,
Imperx chose the company’s IPX-4M15C, a 2048 ×
2048-pixel Camera Link-compatible color camera that
features 8- or 10-bit digital output, and programmable
frame rate and integration time. The project contract
was awarded by the Office of Naval Research and the
NAVSEA Advanced Visualization Office.
System Design
“In the design of the UAV,” says Petko Dinev,
CEO of Imperx, “this camera was modified with
a dc-powered auto-iris function to regulate the amount
of light entering the camera in different lighting conditions.”
After images are captured they are transferred via the
Camera Link interface to Imperx’s FrameLink-JFLEX
frame grabber that is integrated with a JRex-PM CPU
board from Kontron via a proprietary PC-104-like interface.
Kontron’s 3.5-in. CPU board is equipped with a
1.6-GHz Pentium M processor and uses Intel’s 855GM
chipset and a 400-MHz front-side bus and supports up
to 1 Gbyte of DDR-RAM. Both Imperx and Kontron will
offer the frame grabber/CPU combination as a separate
product for other applications such as quality assurance,
production automation, materials flow, and machine control.
Image Transfer Algorithm
According to Dinev, PC-104 frame grabbers and CPUs were
considered in the design of the system. “However,”
says Dinev, “available PC-104 CPUs were not powerful
enough to handle the MJPEG compression required by the
system.” In operation, captured images are first
buffered by the frame grabber memory and transferred
to the host PC. “Because of the large amount of
data associated with these images,” says Dinev,
“they must first be compressed using a standard
MJPEG algorithm. After compression, a GPS header file
must be appended to the images before data can be transmitted
to a ground station. Imperx developed its own MJPEG
compression algorithm, which is performed on the host
CPU. By integrating the Kontron JRex-PM CPU with an
L-Band transceiver with GPS from NAL Research Corporation,
serial commands could be used to interrogate the GPS
that, in turn, supplies global-positioning data from
the Iridium satellite communications system to the host
computer. This information is then integrated as a header
file into each image.
Imperx has developed an Unmanned
Aerial Vehicle that transmits images and global positioning
data to ground stations. On the system’s user
interface, operators are provided a real-time display
of the received images, as well as overlay maps, camera
control functions, and the position and pitch and roll
of the aircraft
Communication between Air
to Ground
To transmit image and position data to a ground monitoring
station, the system uses a wireless RF data transceiver
that is interfaced to the host computer via TCP/IP.
After transmission, the ground station uses a similar
RF data transceiver to capture the images and GPS information
of the aircraft. Software running on the PC-based ground
station then provides a real-time display of the received
images and includes overlay maps, camera control functions,
and the position and pitch and roll of the aircraft.
It also provides a remote camera control that allows
the ground station operator to configure the camera’s
operating parameters in real time.
IR Capability
“In many applications,” says Dinev, “it’s
necessary to equip the aircraft with infrared capability.”
Because of this, the company has also demonstrated a
system that uses the MicroCamera, a Camera Link-compatible
camera from Sensors Unlimited that can capture 320 ×
256 pixels in the short-wavelength IR spectrum.
Deployment
Currently, the system is undergoing field trials at
NAVSEA Carderock. It is scheduled for deployment in
Iraq, where it will be used to search for roadside munitions
along convoy routes of coalition troops.
Reference:
Vision Systems Design
(January, 2005)
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