The present invention relates to the field of portable weapons, and more in particular relates to an aiming system for portable weapons.
As it is known, in order to attain accurate aiming, conventional aiming systems of portable weapons oblige the user to use display apparatus constrained to the weapon. Both in the standard mechanical aiming system, for which two references are collimated along the axis of the barrel, and in advanced systems that use optical paths, IR sensors and other types of device, it is in fact necessary to place the eye, and therefore the face, in proximity of an eyepiece integral with the weapon.
To perform this operation effectively, it is not possible to provide complete protection of the face, which therefore remains exposed, in the case of warfare, to enemy fire.
An example of a partial solution to the problems set forth above is described in the utility model patent application DE202009012199. This document describes a portable weapon equipped with a system the makes it possible to perform aiming operations by means of a helmet equipped with a visor placed in front of the eyes onto which an aiming reticle is dynamically projected.
To ensure that the line of fire of the weapon appears on this reticle, an electronic unit positioned on the helmet calculates the relative angular displacement between two sets of inertial sensors mounted on helmet and weapon respectively, which identify the relative movements of helmet and weapon, and moves the aiming reticle accordingly. In particular, to adjust the orientation in space of the weapon, a circular movement sensor (gyroscope) is arranged thereon.
The helmet is also provided with a gyroscope adapted to trace the angular movements thereof. Both weapon and helmet must be oriented by a magnetic compass (magnetic sensors that determine a fixed orientation in space) and aligned with each other. After having “put on” the system, the shooter must align the weapon with the aiming point of the visor to “calibrate” the system.
This type of improved portable weapon moves in the direction of facilitating the aiming step, as it indirectly results in a limitation of the user's exposure to enemy fire, as it is no longer necessary to place the head in alignment with an aiming system. However, it has considerable practical limits, due substantially to an intrinsic lack of precision in the most “delicate” moments, i.e. those in which the head of the user is positioned at a distance from the weapon.
In fact, it must be noted how this system performs motion relations between weapon and helmet by means of angular coordinates: the user of the weapon is able to align the weapon with the line of sight without having to necessarily position the head (or the eyes) precisely with respect to the line of sight, but is unable to eliminate the error due to a translational motion, i.e. linear and not angular, of the weapon with respect to the helmet (i.e. the parallax error), i.e. with respect to the calibration position.
In some circumstances this limitation makes the aiming system completely useless, for example:
In all these circumstances, the parallax error due to displacement of the line of fire (for example the line of continuation of the barrel of the rifle in which the system is implemented) with respect to the line of sight (parallel to each other) cannot be detected and can easily exceed half a meter on a target at one hundred meters, a value that is unacceptable in the specifications of combat weapons.
Moreover, it is important to note that the gyroscopic sensors (i.e. circular motion sensors) are subject to an intrinsic error called “drift” (a phenomenon for which, even with the sensor stopped, a non-null angular velocity is measured) which causes further inaccuracies in the aim. To limit this drift error to a minimum, it is necessary to use high quality gyroscopes, which naturally increases the costs of the weapon.
The object of the present invention is to solve the problems indicated in prior art portable weapons and in particular to develop an aiming system for portable weapons that is able to prevent exposure of the user during the aiming step, while at the same time maintaining a high aiming precision.
Another important object of the present invention is to develop an aiming system for portable weapon which is inexpensive, while also ensuring high precision.
These and other objects, which will be more apparent below, are achieved with an aiming system for portable weapon according to the appended claim 1.
Further characteristics and advantages of the invention will be more apparent from the description of a preferred but non-exclusive embodiment thereof, illustrated by way of non-limiting example in the accompanying drawings, wherein:
With reference to the aforesaid figures, an aiming system for portable weapons according to the invention is indicated as a whole with the number 10. The number 11 indicates a portable weapon that can be used with the aiming system of the invention, for example an assault rifle, while 12 indicates a display device that can be worn by the user, in this example in the form of a helmet with a Head Up Display 12A (hereinafter also indicated with HUD, for brevity). This head up display 12A defines a visor 12B for the helmet, which also has a protective function for the user.
The system comprises a first pair of inertial sensors 13B-14B adapted to detect respective orientations in space and/or relative orientations of the weapon and of the display device on which they are constrained, a second pair of inertial sensors 13A-14A adapted to detect the orientation of the magnetic field with respect to the weapon and to the display device on which they are constrained, and a third pair of inertial sensors 13C-14C adapted to detect linear displacements and therefore absolute or relative positions in space for the respective weapon bodies and of the display device on which they are constrained.
Preferably, more in particular, mounted on the portable weapon 11 is a first inertial platform 13 which comprises three inertial sensors, and in particular a magnetometric sensor 13A, a gyroscopic sensor 13B and an accelerometer sensor 13C.
Analogously, on the helmet 12 there is a second inertial platform 14, also comprising a magnetometric sensor 14A, a gyroscopic sensor 14B and an accelerometer sensor 14C.
Even more in particular, in this example, the accelerometer and gyroscopic sensors each comprise a predetermined set of three detection directions (for example of Cartesian type) to determine the Cartesian components of acceleration and of angular velocity of the respect inertial platform in space. The magnetometric sensor is capable of detecting the Earth's magnetic axis and therefore of giving a basic spatial reference with respect to which the inertial parameters coming from the accelerometers and from the gyroscopes are calculated.
According to this configuration, each accelerometer sensor 13C-14C is preferably substantially provided with three accelerometers arranged with detection directions coincident with a set of three Cartesian coordinates; analogously, also each gyroscopic sensor 13B-14B is provided with three gyroscopes with detection directions coincident with a set of three reference coordinates. Further, in this example also each magnetometric sensor 13A-14A comprises three magnetometers arranged according to a predetermined set of three detection directions (for example of Cartesian type).
In the example being described, advantageously each inertial platform (or the components thereof) is of MEMS (Micro Electro Mechanical Systems) type, which makes use of the response to the accelerations (linear, including gravity) and to the circular motions of appropriate membranes integrated in electronic transducers.
In the example being described, appropriately, the MEMS gyroscopes used, make use of the Coriolis effect (in a reference system rotating at angular velocity ω a mass m in motion with velocity v is subjected to the force F=−2m(ω×v)).
The simplified geometry of a gyroscope of this type comprises a mass made to vibrate along an axis (direction of the velocity v); when the gyroscope rotates, the Coriolis force introduces a secondary vibration along the axis orthogonal to the axis of vibration: measuring the displacement of the mass in this direction the total angular velocity of the mass is obtained.
MEMS accelerometers instead make use of Newton's law for measurement. They are in particular composed of a test mass with elastic supporting arms. The transduction system of the displacement can, for example, be piezoelectric or capacitive.
Therefore, each inertial platform 13 and 14 has three sensors, each sensor being in practice itself composed of three “sub-sensors” (gyroscopes, accelerometers and magnetometers) arranged orthogonally to one another. The gyroscopes are sensitive to the rotations, the accelerometers are sensitive to the accelerations and also offer a reference to the set of three gyroscopes, i.e. the plane orthogonal to the direction of gravity, while the magnetometers are sensitive to the magnetic field and also offer a reference to the set of three gyroscopes, i.e. the plane orthogonal to the magnetic north of the Earth.
The aiming system 10 also comprises electronic means form managing and processing the information received from the inertial sensors described above, for example an electronic unit 15 physically arranged on the helmet/head display 12A, for example integrated or associated with the second MEMS inertial platform 14. According to the invention, this electronic unit is, among other things, designed to place in mutual relation the orientation and the position in space of the weapon 11 and of the display device 12 and to represent in the visor 12B, on the basis of said relations of orientation and of position, at least part of the firing trajectory of the weapon, i.e. the trajectory of the projectile fired from the weapon, as will be better described below.
It is understood that the system comprises data communication means between the weapon 11 and the display device 12, such as, preferably, a wireless communication system between the first inertial platform 13 and the electronic unit 15, and communication means (preferably of physical type, for example cables or conductive tracks) between the second inertial platform 14 and the same electronic unit 15.
Briefly summarizing the components of the system, this comprises
The system is preferably installed on a helmet capable of protecting the soldier's face completely.
The head up display shows the data to the user, simultaneously showing the real scene and the superimposed information, among which the aiming reticle, which in practice is the end part of the line of fire, thus avoiding significant movements of the head or of the eyes, as occurs, for example, if a soldier requires to aim at the target to be shot at.
Therefore, due to the HUD, the operator can shoot aiming precisely at the target, while maintaining a tangible perception of the battlefield without any obstacles between the eyes and the outside world, as is instead the case with a conventional aiming scope. In particular, the aiming reticle appears on the visor of the helmet, in front of the eyes. To prevent eye fatigue caused by continuous change of focus (focusing—refocusing between real scene and superimposed data), in HUDs for aircraft, for example, the focus is infinite (infinity focusing), so as to allow the pilot to read the display without refocusing. Some experimental HUDs instead operate by writing the information directly on the user's retina.
Operation of the HUD in thus centered on projecting the image, in our case an aiming reticle, onto a clear glass optical element (combiner), as in
The aiming reticle is none other than a visual aid for the user who has to shoot and ideally (unless there are corrections due to the scope or to the mechanical assembly of the weapon) it is aligned with the weapon, i.e. indicates a precise point toward which the projectile fired will be directed.
The head up display is well known in applications to vision systems associated with weapons and is typically composed of the following components:
Having stated this, it must be borne in mind that for operation in the case in hand, the HDU requires data coming from the electronic unit, i.e. the orientation and relative position data between helmet and weapon, which can be calculated using the inertial platforms described (the reticle will take into account the corrections to be made after a few test shots).
It must be noted how the use of movement sensors—both circular and linear—on weapon and helmet makes it possible to eliminate parallax errors (caused by the variable distance between head and weapon) which precede the shooting operation.
In order to operate, the aiming system also requires reference means adapted to define an initial orientation and an initial position in space for the weapon 11 and the display device 12 which must be known to the system in such a manner as to have initial data from which to carry out the variations in orientation and position detected by the sensors. For example, these reference means comprise a positioning area 16A between weapon 11 and display device 12 such that when the weapon is positioned on said display device in said positioning area 16A, the position and the relative orientation of the two parts are unequivocally determined and the system initializes determination of orientation and relative position of the two from the moment of this positioning. For example, the reference area 16A is implemented by a pocket 16A defined on the helmet inside which a counter-shaped part 16B of the weapon 11 is inserted, in such a manner that in coupling thereof the mutual orientation and the mutual position are unequivocally defined. Appropriately, a control can be present on this pocket (for example a push button), so that when the weapon 11 is coupled with the pocket 16A of the helmet, this control is necessarily activated (in the case of the push button, pressed by the weapon) and the system initializes the mutual position and orientation of the weapon and of the display device.
A simple example that briefly illustrates the operation of the system is as follows: a soldier on foot, with rifle held at the side and pointing to the front and with the head facing to the front, sees the aiming reticle (in fact it forms the final part of the firing trajectory of the weapon) on the visor 12B of the head up display in front of his/her face move clearly if the rifle is rotated to the right or left, up or down, with the same direction as the weapon. Instead, if the soldier holds the rifle still and rotates his/her head, the reticle will move in the opposite direction to the rotation. Finally, if the head or the rifle are translated and not rotated with respect to each other, displacement of the reticle takes place according to the description above, but in a much less perceptible manner. It must be noted, for example, how by rotating the weapon by 5° at 100 m, the point of impact is in actual fact 90 m outside the target, while if the weapon is translated by 50 cm with respect to the helmet, at 100 m the point of impact maintains a distance of 50 cm outside the target. Therefore, the distance increases the weight of the angular error, while the linear error remains constant (one of the innovative aspects of the present invention is that of considering relative translation of the display device and of the weapon as a result of determination of their linear translations measured by means of accelerometers).
To correctly display the firing point on the visor, the system uses particularly advantageous algorithms to process the parameters detected by the magnetometric, gyroscopic and accelerometer sensors. Hereinafter, a description will be provided on the basis of a detailed example of operation of the system.
Operation of the aiming system 10 can be divided into two steps: an initializing (or alignment) step of the system, in which the position and relative orientation in space of the weapon and of display device are determined, as described previously, and an aiming and firing step.
In both steps all the parameters provided by the two inertial platforms are permanently read, i.e. three acceleration components, three angular velocities, three magnetic field components for each of the two platforms, measured according to the directions of detection of the sensors, in this example arranged orthogonally to define a set of three Cartesian coordinates.
Hereunder reference will be made only to the inertial platform of the weapon, the description also relating to the inertial platform of the display device, substantially analogous.
Therefore, with Amx, Amy, Amz reference will be made to the accelerations measured by the three accelerometers arranged orthogonally to one another, i.e. along a set of three Cartesian coordinates x, y, z and which are therefore the three Cartesian components of the acceleration to which the platform is subject; analogously Wmx, Wmy, Wmz indicate the components of the angular velocity of the platform measured by the three gyroscopes, and Hx, Hy and Hz, the three magnetic field components measured by the magnetic sensor.
It must be noted that as only the relative position (and not the absolute position) is important, it is unnecessary to correct the magnetometer readings with the angle of magnetic declination and therefore the system can be transported to different parts of the world without requiring recalibration.
As stated, before the aiming system can be used, it must be initialized. This operation ensures that at the time t=0 the two platforms are located at a known mutual distance and angular position (otherwise it would not be possible to measure the initial linear distance without a GPS receiver). During this step the drifts of the gyroscopes and of the accelerometers (offset in the acceleration and angular velocity values which, with the two systems stopped, should be null, but which are instead perceived by the system) are measured and subtracted (naturally if present), i.e. cancelled, at the subsequent acquisitions. For initialization, as stated, the helmet is provided with a reference pocket 16A on which the corresponding part 16B on the weapon is positioned, with a predetermined orientation. Initialization of the system requires a few seconds, is started, for example, by pressure of the part 16B (or other appropriate part of the weapon) on the pocket 16A and can be repeated to “reset” the system in the case of need.
More schematically, this initialization step includes (the inertial platforms 13 and 14 are not moving with respect to each other):
The moment in which the weapon 11 is moved away from the helmet (separation from the reference pocket 16A), the inertial platforms 13 and 14 on the weapon 11 and on the helmet 12 respectively, measure their positions in space and consequently the mutual distance and the mutual orientation. Orientation is expressed by means of Tait-Bryan angles (a variant of Euler angles which, as known, describe the position of an XYZ reference system integral with a rigid body through a series of rotations starting from a fixed xyz reference system; the origin of the two reference systems coincides) also known as “roll”, “pitch” and “heading” (or yaw), or according to convention in short as R , P and H.
Calculation of the orientation (i.e. of angles) starting from the angular velocity values measured by the gyroscopes takes place by integrating the velocity once, while the position is calculated by integrating the acceleration measured by the accelerometers twice.
The integration step of the angular velocity and acceleration data must be implemented correcting the effect caused by gravity acceleration and centripetal acceleration, which would falsify the values, as better described below.
The steps of this algorithm are as follows (the steps refer to the orientation and position measurement of the weapon, the steps relating to the display device being substantially identical).
The processing unit 15 receives the linear acceleration data (point (1) in
The readings of the accelerometers 13C are corrected (point (4)), subtracting the drift that was calculated in the initialization step, as described previously, obtaining refined values Amx-d, Amy-d, Amz-d.
Analogously, the readings of the gyroscopes 13B are corrected (point (5)), subtracting the drift that was calculated in the initialization step, as described previously, obtaining refined values Wmx-d, Wmy-d, Wmz-d.
To obtain the value of the Tait-Bryan (or Euler) angles R, P and H that define the orientation in space of the inertial platform 13, it is necessary to integrate, for example as in point (6a), the derivatives R′, P′ and H′ of these angles, calculated as follows (point (6)).
where s(−) and c(−) indicate the sine and cosine functions (hereunder t(−) indicates the tangent function).
The values of R, P and H will also be used to determine the conversion matrices between the two reference systems, the one integral with the inertial platform and the Earth reference system, and in particular the NED system (i.e. the “North East” Down reference system integral with the Earth).
The conversion matrix between platform system and NED system is:
wherein P, R and H are respectively the Pitch, Roll and Heading value; the inverse matrix MBN can also be obtained from this matrix for the inverse transformation.
The expression of the conversion matrix between platform and NED reference (Earth reference system) and also the expression of the matrix that enables the derivatives of the angles of orientation to be obtained from readings of the gyroscopes (Wmx, Wmy, Wmz) (point (6)) is well known in the literature, for example in “Grewal, M. S., Weill, L. R., and Andrews, A. P., Global Positioning Systems, Inertial Navigation, and Integration, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 2001”.
The gravity acceleration component (point (8)) and the centripetal acceleration (point (9)) are subtracted from the datum supplied by the accelerometers (Amx, Amy, Amz). That is, the following formulae are applied to obtain the corrected values Ax, Ay, Az knowing the raw values Ami, i.e. those supplied directly by the accelerometers:
Ax=Amx-d−(Wmx-dVz−Wmz-dVy)−gs(P)
Ay=Amy-d−(Wmz-dVx−Wmx-dVz)−gs(R)c(P)
Az=Amz-d−(Wmx-dVy−Wmy-dVx)−gc(R)c(P)
where Vx, Vy, Vz, are the velocity values obtained from integration of the acceleration point (10), g indicates the gravity acceleration and P and R respectively indicate the Pitch and Roll value. At the first step of the algorithm, the velocities Vx, Vy, Vz are not yet available, as they are obtained from integration of the same accelerations that are being processed, and therefore must be appropriately initialized at zero. In fact, the initial relative velocity between the two platforms (the only motions of interest are in fact those that are relative) is equal to zero.
The preceding relations are easily obtainable. By way of example, let us consider the first: the projection of gravity on the axis x of the platform and the component along the axis x of the vector product between the angular velocity and linear velocity vector, both expressed in the reference system of the platform, are subtracted from the raw acceleration Amx-d along the axis x.
The accelerations Ax, Ay, Az thus refined are integrated (point (10)), as already mentioned, to obtain the velocity components Vx, Vy, Vz. These latter are reproduced in the NED system by means of the aforesaid conversion matrix MBN, thus obtaining the velocity components in the earth system VxN, VyN, VzN. Moreover, these velocities are further integrated (point (11)) to finally reach the position in space of the inertial platform (SxN, SyN, SzN).
As the accelerations in play are of limited size, the orientation can also be obtained by measuring the projection of the gravity acceleration on the axes of the accelerometer and measuring the Heading angle using the magnetic field sensor. The equations to obtain the Tait-Bryan (Euler) angles with the accelerometer and magnetometer readings are the following:
P=s−1(Ax)
R=t−1(Ay/Az)
H=t−1(Hy/Hx)
For proof of these relations reference should be made to specialized texts (e.g. “Grewal, M. S., Weill, L. R., and Andrews, A. P., Global Positioning Systems, Inertial Navigation, and Integration, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 2001” and others).
Therefore, the Tait-Bryan (Euler) angles (P,R,H), which describe the orientation in space of a rigid body, are obtained in two distinct ways (integration of the gyroscopes on the one hand and use of accelerometers and magnetometers on the other).
Appropriately, in the algorithm of the invention, the two data are merged in an iterative sub-algorithm hereinafter called “sensor fusion” algorithm, to obtain an even more precise result using the block diagram indicated in
Substantially, the algorithm functions in the same way for R, P and H; therefore, the single case relating to the Pitch (P) is described below. In the first step the algorithm subtracts from the derivative of the Pitch, calculated in point (6) through the gyroscopes, a parameter k (the value of which is appropriately initialized, but which in theory could be any, accepting a few extra seconds delay in the reaching steady state of the attitude data), after which it is integrated and output as final Pitch value. Instead, starting from the second step, the value of k which is added to/subtracted from the derivative of the Pitch varies according to the difference between Pgyro (i.e. calculated starting from the measurement at the gyroscopes) and Pacc (i.e. calculated starting from the measurement at the accelerometers). In this way, this difference is gradually leveled out and also changes the output Pitch value (as the same integrand varies, when k varies).
This sub-algorithm is defined “sensor fusion” as it merges the data coming from three different types of sensor, the gyroscopes, the accelerometers and the magnetometers (
As stated, the algorithm of the invention calculates, on the basis of the acceleration, angular velocity and magnetic angle values, the position in space of the inertial platforms (SxN, SyN, SzN) of the weapon and of the display device. More in particular, the measurement of the orientation of the weapon and of the helmet and the mutual distance given by the difference of the components of the position vector are provided at the output of the algorithm.
Therefore, the data sent at the output of the algorithm are:
P—relative=P—helmet−P—weapon
R—relative=R—helmet−R—weapon
H—relative=H—hemlet−H—weapon
SxN
SyN
SzN
The mutual position of the two platforms (relative angle and distance) is used to project in a three-dimensional manner the position of the line of fire on the visor 12B of the head up display 12A.
Given the accuracy of current MEMS systems, and the initialization procedure, the aiming system proposed is capable of allowing a standard man target to be hit at 100 m. With the current technology, the inertial platform and the algorithms developed can reach an accuracy of 0.2°; by combining the measurement uncertainty of the two inertial platforms, an accuracy of 0.3° is obtained, equivalent to around 6 mrad, i.e. a tolerance of 50 cm at a distance of 100 m. In the case in which the weapon is used in “almost static” mode, i.e. without sudden and continual movements of the helmet and of the rifle, the accuracy can reach 0.02°, i.e. a tolerance of 10 cm at 100 m, therefore better than that determined by the natural dispersion of the weapon. It is understood that with normal advance in the precision of the technologies used, this accuracy is destined to increase further.
It is evident how the aiming system described above achieves the set objects. In fact, the proposed system makes it possible to aim the fire of an assault weapon at a target without the need to place the eye, and therefore the face, on the line of sight.
A particularly advantageous aspect of this system is that the soldier's head, face, neck and throat can be protected at all times using a full face helmet with anti-shrapnel visor, so as to reduce trauma in an area that is currently the most vulnerable to any form of attack.
This system enables the elimination of any type of E/O sensor (both in the visible and the infrared band), eyepieces, objective lenses, keypads from the weapon, greatly reducing its weight and leaving only a mechanism for the inertial platform and the electronics for composition of the partial deviations (of the rifle) and transmission thereof. It must be noted how the system can, in a variant, be equipped on the helmet with a sensor for nocturnal movement: the reticle would in this case appear not on the head up display, but on the image generated by the indirect display system positioned on the helmet and reproduced on a standard eyepiece.
A fundamental aspect of the present aiming system is that of detecting and therefore of correcting the parallax error that arises in the case of deferred shot. In fact, accelerometers are used for the first time to enable correction of a parallax error.
It is understood that the drawing only shows possible non-limiting embodiments of the invention, which can vary in forms and arrangements without however departing from the scope of the concept on which the invention is based. Any reference numerals in the appended claims are provided purely to facilitate the reading thereof, in the light of the above description and accompanying drawings, and do not in any way limit the scope of protection.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2011A0266 | Dec 2011 | IT | national |
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PCT/EP2012/074831 | 12/7/2012 | WO | 00 |
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WO2013/083796 | 6/13/2013 | WO | A |
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