The present invention relates to a tethered helicopter surveillance system, and more particularly, to a system with a helicopter tethered by cable for data transfer.
In the past, it has been proposed to mount a camera on helicopters and to control the position and attitude of the helicopters so that the line of sight of the camera, usually a television camera, is accurately positioned in space.
This prior proposal suffers from the disadvantage that it is virtually impossible to angularly stabilize a rotating helicopter sufficiently to meet the image clarity and resolution requirements of a camera mounted thereon.
Applicants have overcome these disadvantages by isolating the camera from the helicopter and mounting the camera on a gyroscopically stabilized platform whilst permitting the helicopter to move in angular attitude relatively thereto.
In this invention, the surveillance system is generally equipped with a helicopter with at least one propeller or rotor allowing vertical takeoff and hovering; a camera or sensor system for gaining useful information relative to the helicopter's immediate surroundings as well as the land, sea and sky area within sight of the aircraft; and a tethered cable for transferring information to the ground station.
Such a system is useful where it is desirable to observe surrounding areas, such as in reconnaissance by field troops, or in civilian work that requires observation from a distance.
The helicopter may take a variety of shapes and sizes. A single main rotor shape such as is shown in
The tethered cable includes an optical fiber, an electrical wire (if needed), and/or other media transfer wires.
The fiber optic rotary joint is a mean to pass signals across rotating interfaces, particularly when transmitting large amounts of data. These signals can carry video, audio, data, control, power, or other information. Fiber rotary joint allows for free rotation of fiber while maintaining excellent coupling efficiency, because no physical contact occurs between two aligned fibers.
Media converters are also called fiber links, fiber modems, fiber transmitters/receivers, or transceivers. They convert video, audio, data, or control signals (analog or digital) into optical signals, which are then converted back to electrical signals at the remote end.
In operation, the helicopter (5) lifts up all the components of the invention, except the ground station (1), to a certain altitude while the cable (2) is connected to the ground station (1). The camera and/or sensor system, locating within the gyroscopically stabilized platform (4) captures useful information relative to the helicopter's immediate surroundings. All the information is converted by media converters and transferred from the camera and/or sensor system to the ground station (1) through the cable (2) in real time.
This application claims benefit to provisional application No. 61/673,040, filed on Jul. 18, 2012, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.