The present disclosed subject matter relates to a device for surveying an environment by time-of-flight measurement of laser beams reflected therefrom, e.g., pulsed laser beams, comprising a beam deflection device having at least one mirror surface which can be rotated or oscillated about an axis of rotation which is non-normal to the mirror surface, which beam deflection device has a mirror prism, the prism lateral sides of which each form a mirror surface and the prism axis of which is the axis of rotation, a first laser transmitter, which is configured to emit a first transmission laser beam in a first time-dependent transmission direction via the beam deflection device, and a first laser receiver, which is configured to receive as a first reception laser beam the first transmission laser beam reflected by the environment and received back via the beam deflection device in a first time-dependent reception direction, wherein the first transmission and reception directions lie parallel to one another and at a first angle to the axis of rotation at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams.
Devices of this type are known, for example, from EP 3 182 159 B1 and are used in particular for airborne surveying of landscapes. From a laser scanner on board an aircraft, multiple laser pulses are emitted from a high altitude by means of the beam deflection device onto many target points on the ground, and from time-of-flight measurements of the target reflections, the target distances and from these—knowing the position and location of the laser scanner and the respective deflection angle—a point model (“3D point cloud”) of the landscape are created. In the process, the transmission laser beam directed at the rotating or oscillating mirror surface(s) is periodically swivelled (“scanned”) by this or these over a scanning angle range and forms a scanning fan for sweeping the landscape. The reception laser beam reflected by the environment is received back along the same path, i.e. the mirror surface used in each case to emit a transmission laser pulse in a specific direction is simultaneously used to deflect the laser pulse received from the same direction to the laser receiver.
Such laser scanners have to fulfil a wide range of requirements. On the one hand, it is desirable to create the point cloud as quickly and completely as possible during the survey flight, on the other hand, the survey should be as error-free as possible at the same time. Dust, humidity or clouds in the near range can cause interfering reflections which complicate the creation of the landscape model or falsify it. The aim of the disclosed subject matter is to create a device for laser scanning which enables a particularly fast and meaningful creation of a point cloud of the environment, free of near-target errors.
This aim is achieved with a device of the type mentioned at the outset, which is characterised according to the disclosed subject matter by a second laser transmitter, which is configured to emit a second transmission laser beam in a second time-dependent transmission direction via the beam deflection device, and a second laser receiver, which is configured to receive as a second reception laser beam the second transmission laser beam reflected by the environment and received back via the beam deflection device in a second time-dependent reception direction, wherein the second transmission and reception directions lie parallel to one another and at a second angle to the axis of rotation at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams, and wherein the first laser receiver is spaced apart from the first laser transmitter and the second laser receiver is spaced apart from the second laser transmitter, in each case in the direction of the axis of rotation.
The laser scanning device of the disclosed subject matter can emit two or more (see further below) divergent scanning fans simultaneously with a single beam deflection device. On the one hand, this allows twice as many measurement points of the environment to be created for the point cloud in the same time. On the other hand, if the device is moved over the environment in a feed direction that deviates from the scanning fan planes, the same point in the environment will be hit by the scanning fans at different angles in each case, so that surfaces that happen to lie in the plane of one scanning fan can also be correctly detected by another scanning fan. If, for example, in airborne surveying one scanning fan is directed in the nadir direction and the other scanning fan is directed obliquely forwards or backwards, vertical house façades can also be correctly mapped in the point cloud. At the same time, the survey is not susceptible to interference from “wrong” environment targets in the near range, such as chassis parts of an aircraft, clouds, etc., due to the parallax caused by the mutual spacing of the laser transmitters and receivers in the direction of the axis of rotation. Due to this parallax, the device can only detect targets from a certain minimum distance, which depends on the beam expansion of the transmission laser beam, the reception aperture of the laser receiver, and the aforementioned distance between transmitter and receiver.
As a result, the device of the disclosed subject matter achieves a particularly fast, complete and interference-free surveying of the environment with simple means, namely a single beam deflection device extending in the direction of the axis of rotation, along which the laser transmitters and receivers are distributed.
Optionally, the laser emitters are directed towards the beam deflection device such that the transmission laser beams cross one another substantially at the beam deflection device. The expression “substantially at the beam deflection device” means the immediate vicinity of the beam deflection device in relation to the average measurement distance of the environment. For example, in the case of an airborne laser scanner, the environment is surveyed from an altitude of several 100 metres or kilometres, and a comparatively negligible near range can be up to a few metres.
By crossing the transmission laser beams as close as possible to the beam deflection device, the points of impact of the transmission laser beams on the mirror surface(s) of the beam deflection device are as close to one another as possible, seen in the direction of the axis of rotation, so that the length of the beam deflection device in the direction of the axis of rotation can be reduced.
According to a further optional feature of the disclosed subject matter, the angular orientations of the laser transmitters and receivers and, further optionally, also the distances of the laser receivers from the beam deflection device are selected in such a way that the reception laser beams cross one another between the beam deflection device and the laser receivers. In the same way, this minimises the impingement area required for the reception laser beams on the beam deflection device in the direction of its axis of rotation. Furthermore, a common focusing optical unit can be arranged in the crossing area of the reception laser beams, so that only one focusing optical unit is required for all reception laser beams and their size can be reduced to the crossing area.
In a first optional embodiment of the disclosed subject matter, the first and second transmission and reception directions lie in a common plane parallel to the axis of rotation at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams. When the device is mounted with its axis of rotation in the feed direction of a transport platform, for example an aircraft, the scanning fans thereby overlap in the feed direction, so that one and the same locations of the environment of scanning fans can be scanned at different angles.
In a second optional embodiment of the disclosed subject matter, the laser transmitters and laser receivers are oriented in such a way that, between the beam deflection device and the environment, those transmission and reception laser beams which, viewed away from the beam deflection device, approach one another are skewed relative to one another. This increases the near-range insensitivity and thus the susceptibility to interference of the device. Without this measure, it could be that the transmission laser beam of a laser transmitter is reflected by a near target, for example a cloud, in the reception direction of a laser receiver assigned to another laser transmitter and thus leads to faulty points in the point cloud.
In a first possible variant, the mirror prism has a groove running around its periphery, wherein, viewed in the direction of the prism axis, the laser transmitters lie to one side of the groove and the laser receivers to the other side of the groove. In a second possible variant, the mirror prism has a rib running around its periphery, wherein, viewed in the direction of the prism axis, the laser emitters lie to one side of the rib and the laser receivers to the other side of the rib. This can significantly increase the selectivity of the near-range insensitivity of the device. Interfering scattering of the transmission laser beams into the reception laser beams in the near range of the device is additionally blocked by this groove or rib.
In both variants, viewed in the direction of the prism axis, the laser receivers optionally lie at a greater distance from the groove or rib than the laser transmitters. In other words, a large part of the longitudinal extent of the mirror prism is made available for the impingement area of the reception laser beams, so that a large reception aperture can be used and thus the device has a high measuring sensitivity and thus a high measuring range. At the same time, the longitudinal portion of the mirror prism used for the transmission laser beams is minimised so that the mirror prism has a reduced length.
The device according to the disclosed subject matter can be extended with the stated principles to any number of laser transmitters and receivers, for example three, four, five, etc., each directed towards the beam deflection device at different angles. Accordingly, a further optional embodiment of the disclosed subject matter is characterised by a third laser transmitter, which is configured to emit a third transmission laser beam in a third time-dependent transmission direction via the beam deflection device, and a third laser receiver, which is configured to receive as a third reception laser beam the third transmission laser beam reflected by the environment and received back via the beam deflection device in a third time-dependent reception direction, wherein the third transmission and reception directions lie parallel to one another and at a third angle to the axis of rotation at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams, and wherein the third laser receiver is spaced apart from the third laser transmitter in the direction of the axis of rotation.
For the detection of vertical surfaces or façades in an overflown terrain, it is favourable if the first transmission and reception directions with the second transmission and reception directions, and also the second transmission and reception directions with the third transmission and reception directions, form an angle, in each case at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams, in the range of 1° to 30°, optionally 5° to 15°, e.g., 5° to 10°.
If it is also optionally provided that all mirror surfaces are parallel to the axis of rotation and the second transmission and reception directions are normal to the axis of rotation, this results—with a horizontal movement of the device relative to the environment that is not in the scanning fan plane—in a first scanning fan in the nadir direction, a second scanning fan in an oblique forward direction, and a third scanning fan in an oblique backward direction. This allows point clouds of overflown buildings with vertical surfaces to be created particularly well.
In each of the aforementioned embodiments, it is advantageous if the beam deflection device has at least one compensation mirror in the beam path of the reception laser beams to the laser receivers, which can be adjusted about an adjustment axis parallel to the axis of rotation. Such a compensation mirror can be used to compensate for the time offset, and thus the directional offset, of the mirror surface(s) of the beam deflection device, which elapses between the emission of a laser pulse from the beam deflection device until its return reception at the beam deflection device. During this time, the corresponding mirror surface has already rotated a little further, and thus it would “look” in a different direction for the reception laser beam than it “sent” for the transmission laser beam. This directional offset depends on the measuring distance and the angular velocity of the mirror surface and can be compensated accordingly by the compensation mirror. The transmission and reception directions of the associated laser transmitters and receivers can thus be kept constantly parallel to one another regardless of the angular velocity and the measuring distance, which simplifies the set-up considerably. However, it is understood that instead of a compensation mirror, the laser receivers could also be slightly angularly adjusted with respect to the laser transmitters or parts of the transmission deflection device assigned to them, which is subsumed here under the term “substantially parallel transmission and reception directions of the laser transmitters and receivers”.
It is favourable if a common compensation mirror is provided for all reception laser beams. Since said directional offset is the same for all reception laser beams, such a single compensation mirror can be used, thus simplifying the construction of the device.
As discussed, a possible form of application of the device of the disclosed subject matter is that it is mounted on an aircraft configured for a main direction of flight with its axis of rotation non-normal to the main direction of flight, optionally substantially parallel to the main direction of flight.
The Disclosed Subject Matter is Explained in Greater Detail Below with Reference to Exemplary Embodiments Shown in the Accompanying Drawings. The Drawings Show:
The device 1 scans the environment 2 by means of two or more (here: three) laser measuring beams 41, 42, 43, generally 4i (i=1, 2, . . . ), for the purpose of surveying it. Each laser measuring beam 4i is pivoted back and forth to form a respective scanning fan 5i and is moved forward in the direction of travel F of the vehicle 3 to scan the environment 2 in adjacent scanning strips 6 (only one shown). If the vehicle 3 is an aircraft, the direction of travel F is the main direction of flight of the aircraft for which it is built.
The direction of travel F does not lie in the planes of the scanning fans 5i. In the case shown, the direction of travel F is normal to the plane of the scanning fan 52, so that the scanning fan 52 lies in the nadir direction of the vehicle 3 and the scanning fan 53 is directed obliquely forwards and the scanning fan 51 is directed obliquely backwards downwards towards the environment 2. However, the scanning fans 5i can also be rotated, for example, about a vertical axis g of the vehicle 3, so that their lines of intersection 7i with the environment 2, the “scan rows”, in the scan strip 6 lie obliquely to the projected direction of travel F. In the same way, the scanning fans can be rotated about a pitch axis p and/or roll axis r of the vehicle 3.
The scanning fans 5i are not necessarily planar. For example, due to the deflection mechanism of the laser measurement beams 4i discussed later, the backward and forward scanning fans 51, 53 lie on weakly curved cone surfaces; see the exemplary curvatures of the scan line 71, 73. This is negligible for the purposes of the present disclosed subject matter; the terms “planar” scanning fans 5i and “scanning fan planes” of the scanning fans 5i are understood in the present description to include such weakly curved scanning fans.
Each laser measurement beam 4i comprises a transmission laser beam 8i from the device 1 to the environment 2 and a reception laser beam 9i reflected by said environment back to the device 1. From time-of-flight measurements of laser pulses Si,n (n=1, 2, . . . ), which are contained in the respective transmission laser beam 8i and are each reflected at a point Pi,n of the environment 2 and are received back as environment-reflected laser pulses Ei,n in the reception laser beams 9i in the device 1, distance measurement values di,n from a current position posi,n of the device 1 to the respective scanning point Pi,n of the environment 2 can be calculated using the known relationship
d
i,n
=c·ΔTP
i,n/2=c·(tE,i,n−tS,i,n)/2 (1)
with
Knowing the respective position posi,n of the device 1 at the time of emission of the laser pulse Si,n in a local or global x/y/z coordinate system 10 of the environment 2, the respective orientation orii,n of the device 1 in the coordinate system 10, indicated for example by the tilt, roll and yaw angles of the vehicle 3 about its transverse, longitudinal and vertical axes p, r, g, and the respective angular position angi,n of the laser measurement beam 4i in the direction of the point Pi,n with respect to the vehicle 3, the position of the scanning point Pi,n in the coordinate system 10 can then be calculated from the respective distance measurement value di,n. A multitude of such surveyed and calculated scanning points Pi,n image the environment 2 in the form of a “scanning point cloud” in the coordinate system 10.
According to
The pulse repetition rate (PRR) of the transmission laser pulses Si,n is constant or can be modulated, for example to resolve MTA (multiple time around) ambiguities, in order to facilitate the assignment of reception pulses Ei,n and transmission pulses Si,n to one another, as known in the art.
In the example of
The mirror prism 17 rotates with an angular velocity ω. Due to the time of flight ΔTi,n of a laser pulse emitted by the device 1 as a transmission laser pulse Si,n and received back in the device 1 as a reception laser pulse Ei,n, the beam deflection device 13 continues to move at the angular velocity ω during the time of flight ΔTi,n, so that the corresponding mirror surface 19-25 (here: 24) no longer has the same position when the reception laser beam 9i is received. In order to nevertheless be able to receive the corresponding reception laser pulse Ei,n in the laser receiver 14i from exactly the orientation Ri,n of the transmission laser beam 8i when measuring the ambient point Pi,n with the transmission laser pulse Si,n, the beam deflection device 13 additionally has a compensation mirror 27 which can be adjusted about an adjusting axis 28 parallel to the axis of rotation 26 by means of an actuator 29. The actuator 29 can be controlled, for example, by the angular velocity co and the current average target distance di,n of the last measured points Pi,n in order to compensate for the aforementioned effect.
Instead of using a compensation mirror 27, the aforementioned angular offset between the transmission laser beam 8i and the reception laser beam 9i, which depends on the angular velocity ω and the current average target distance di,n, could also be achieved by a corresponding angular offset between the respective laser transmitter 11i and its associated laser receiver 14i, for example by a swivel bearing of the laser transmitter 11i and/or laser receiver 14i about the axis of rotation 26, which swivel bearing is adjusted by the actuator 29. In a further variant, a longitudinal portion 17a of the mirror prism 17 used for the laser transmitters 11i could be angularly rotated relative to a longitudinal portion 17b of the mirror prism 17 used for the laser receivers 14i, for example by the longitudinal portions 17a, 17b being mounted on a common shaft so as to be angularly rotatable relative to one another about the axis of rotation 26, in order to compensate for the aforementioned angular offset between the transmission and reception laser beams 8i, 9i. The angular offset between the two longitudinal portions 17a, 17b of the mirror prism 17 is again adjusted for this purpose by the actuator 29 depending on the angular velocity ω of the mirror prism 17 and the current average target distance di,n.
For each transmission/reception channel i, i.e. for each scanning fan 5i, the device 1 comprises in each case a laser transmitter 11i and an associated laser receiver 14i, i.e. in the example shown the laser transmitter and laser receiver pairs {11, 1411}, {11, 1422} and {11, 1433}. The transmission direction 30i of the device 1 for a laser transmitter 11i is in each case substantially parallel to the reception direction 31i of the device 1 for the laser receiver 14i of the laser transmitter and laser receiver pair responsible for the respective scanning fan 5i, more specifically in each case viewed at the transmission time tS,i,n (the “transmission time”) and associated reception time tE,i,n (the “reception time”) of the transmission and reception laser pulses Si,n and Ei,n in the transmission and reception laser beams 8i and 9i respectively. The angular offset by the compensation mirror 27 or the mutual rotation of the laser transmitters and laser receivers 11i, 14i or of corresponding longitudinal portions 17a, 17b of the mirror prism 17 about the axis of rotation 26 compensates here for the further rotation of the deflection device 13 during the pulse time of flight di,n.
The transmission directions 30i of all laser transmitters 11i lie—viewed at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams 8i, 9i—in each case at a different angle αi to the axis of rotation 26 and thus to the mirror surfaces 18-25 used in each case; see
The angle α1-α2 between the transmission direction 301 of the first laser transmitter 111 and the transmission direction 302 of the second laser transmitter 112 as well as the angle α2-α3 between the transmission direction 302 of the second laser transmitter 112 and the transmission direction 303 of the third laser transmitter 113—and thus also the respective angles between the reception directions 311, 312, 313—is—again considered at the respective transmission and reception times of the transmission and reception laser beams 8i, 9i—for example in each case 1° to 30°, optionally 5° to 15°, e.g., 5° to 10°, and for example approximately 7°.
It is understood that the laser emitters 11i and laser receivers 14i could also be directed directly at the mirror surfaces 18-25 of the deflection device 13 instead of via the deflection and compensation mirrors 12, 27, or via several deflection and/or compensation mirrors.
The laser transmitters 11, and the respective associated laser receivers 14, are spaced apart from one another as seen in the direction of the axis of rotation 26, i.e. have a parallax PX in the direction of the axis of rotation 26. As a result, the laser receivers 14, are insensitive, or “blind” so to speak, to reflections of the transmission laser beams 8i on surrounding targets located in a near range N from the device 1, for example chassis parts of the vehicle 3, clouds, etc.
As shown in
In order to further improve the near-range insensitivity of the device 1 and to increase the selectivity of the near range N, the mirror prism 17 can optionally be equipped with a rib 34 running around its periphery. The larger the diameter of the rib 34, the better the selectivity of the near range N; also, the rib 34 can be used to completely block stray light from very close targets, such as stray reflections from the housing 16 of the device 1 or from parts of the vehicle 3.
Instead of the peripheral rib 34, a peripheral groove can also be machined into the mirror prism 17 to increase the selectivity between the transmission and reception channels of the device 1. Such a groove can also be interpreted as meaning that the mirror prism 17 is composed of a sequence of several individual mirror prisms connected axially in series on one and the same axis of rotation 26, which rotate together about the axis of rotation 26.
For a high sensitivity of the device 1 and thus the measurement of distant environments 2, the largest possible reception aperture A of the laser receivers 11i is desirable, i.e. the largest possible mirror surfaces 18-25, the largest possible focusing optical units 32 and a correspondingly large compensation mirror 27. As can be seen from
b>a,
optionally
b>>a.
As a result, a larger axial area of the mirror prism 17 is reserved for the reception laser beams 9i than for the transmission laser beams 8i. In contrast, the transmission laser beams 8i of the laser transmitters 11i are strongly bundled and require only very small impact points on the mirror prism 17, so that only a short axial portion of the mirror prism 17 needs to be reserved for the transmission laser beams 8.i
In order to minimise the area required for the transmission laser beams 8i on the mirror prism 17, the laser transmitters 11i are arranged with respect to the mirror prism 17 (whether with or without deflection mirror 12) in such a way that the transmission laser beams 8i cross substantially at the beam deflection device 13, i.e. in its immediate vicinity, at a crossing point Ks. The closer the crossing point Ks is to the mirror surfaces 18-25 of the mirror prism 17, the shorter the axial portion of the mirror prism 17, viewed in the direction of the axis of rotation 26, that is required for the deflection of the transmission laser beams 8i on the mirror prism 17.
The laser receivers 14i are also optionally arranged in such a way that the reception laser beams 9i cross one another, more specifically on the one hand also in the vicinity of the beam deflection device 13, in order to minimise the axial length of the mirror prism 17 required for this, and on the other hand in order to arrange the focusing optical units 32 in the crossing area KE of said reception laser beams. In this way, the size of the focusing optical units 32 can be reduced to the crossing area KE and thus minimised.
If all mirror surfaces 18-25 of the beam deflection device 13 are parallel to the axis of rotation 26 and the second transmission and reception directions 302, 312 are normal to the axis of rotation 26, then the second scanning fan 52 extends in the nadir direction from the vehicle 3, provided the axis of rotation 26 is horizontal. If the axis of rotation 26 is positioned in the direction of travel F of the vehicle 3, then in this case the scanning fan 52 lies in a vertical plane transverse to the direction of travel F. The first and third scanning fans 51, 53 are then inclined obliquely forwards and obliquely backwards, respectively.
In order to prevent accidental backscattering of those transmission laser beams 8i which, viewed away from the beam deflection device 13, approach the reception laser beams 9i (here: the transmission laser beam 81 and the reception laser beam 93), so that they might thus be accidentally reflected by a near target 33, the following optional measure can be taken. The laser transmitters and laser receivers 11i, 14i are oriented in such a way that the transmission and reception laser beams 8i, 9i between the beam deflection device 13 and the environment 2, which approach one another when viewed away from the beam deflection device 13 (here: viewed downwards), are at an angle to one another. In this way, the situation shown in
It is understood that the laser transmitters 11, and their transmission directions 30i (and correspondingly also the laser receivers 14i and reception directions 31i parallel thereto) then no longer lie in a plane parallel to the axis of rotation 26, but deviate therefrom. Even a slight deviation from the plane of the axis of rotation 26 is sufficient to achieve a normal distance between the skewed transmission and reception laser beams 8i, 9j in the desired near range of the device 1, which corresponds approximately to the parallax PX and thus establishes the same near-range insensitivity as the parallax PX for non-approaching, i.e. parallel, laser beams (82, 92) or diverging (83, 91) transmission and reception beams 8i, 9i.
It is understood that in all embodiments shown, instead of rotating mirror surfaces 18-25, in particular instead of a rotating mirror prism 17, periodically oscillating mirror surfaces 18-25 could also be used, for example a single oscillating mirror corresponding to one of the mirror surfaces 18, 25 in the arrangement shown in
Accordingly, the disclosed subject matter is not limited to the embodiments shown, but encompasses all variants, modifications and combinations thereof which fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20213336.9 | Dec 2020 | EP | regional |
This application is a National Phase application of International Application No. PCT/EP2021/084601 filed Dec. 7, 2021 which claims priority to the European Patent Application No. 20 213 336.9 filed Dec. 11, 2020, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2021/084601 | 12/7/2021 | WO |