This invention relates to display systems such as (but not exclusively), helmet-mounted display systems and head-mounted display systems. It is particularly relevant to systems for presenting to pilots and other aircrew of helicopters or fixed wing aircraft, or operators and other crew members of other vehicles (e.g. armoured fighting vehicles), an image of a field of view of the external environment of the vehicle. It also is of use in sighting devices for guns and other ordnance.
Night vision goggles (NVG) are now commonly used by military and emergency service pilots to operate helicopters, and are especially useful when landing under low light conditions. The NVG can be adapted to provide, superimposed on the external field of view, important primary flight data (altitude, attitude, heading and speed) and/or specific landing-related data such as height and position relative the landing ground. These devices are commonly known as Display Night Vision Goggles (DNVG). However, difficulties can arise when the helicopter is to be landed in dusty conditions, or when the landing ground is covered with surface water or loose snow. Then the ground wash from the helicopter may generate a cloud of dust, snow particles or water spray which can confuse the NVG and cause it to present to the pilot a uniformly-bright washed-out image, or one in which the image is reduced to a large number of bright moving spots of light. Then, not only is the pilot deprived of visual references at a critical moment during landing, but the corrupted display merges with the superimposed data display, rendering the superimposed display illegible.
The present invention seeks to provide a solution to, or at least to alleviate, this problem.
In one aspect the invention provides a method of maintaining the visibility of an image superimposed on a enhanced indirect image of a real field of view comprising sensing the brightness of the enhanced image and controlling the contrast between the superimposed image and the enhanced image in response to the sensed brightness.
In the context of the particular problem set out above (although the invention is not limited to solving that problem) the superimposed image may be a data display, and the enhanced image may be a field of view of an external environment of a helicopter or other aircraft which is presented to a pilot or other operator or user thereof.
In another aspect, the invention provides a display system comprising an imaging means for presenting to a user an enhanced indirect first image of a real field of view, means for presenting a second image to the user superimposed on the first image, a sensor for sensing the brightness of first image, and control means responsive to the sensor for controlling the contrast between the first and second images so as to maintain the visibility to the user of the second image.
By indirect image we mean one produced by sensing visible light or other radiation from a field of view, and processed it electronically to generate a visible image.
Again with non-limiting reference to the aforementioned problem, if the first imaging means is susceptible to presenting a confused first image when the real field of view comprises airborne light-scattering particles, the control means may be configured to maintain the visibility of the second image relative to the confused first image.
The system may be a helmet-mounted display or a head-mounted display.
The system may be a sighting device for a gun or other ordnance.
The system may be configured for use by an operator or other user of a vehicle, and may comprise means for receiving data (e.g. vehicle-related data) for display as the second image.
“Vehicle” as used herein means any conveyance or other moveable platform, whether for use in the air, on land or sea, or otherwise.
The first imaging means may be a low-light imaging means or an infra-red imaging means.
The second image presenting means may be configured to superimpose the second image on the first image after the first image has been processed by the first imaging means.
The control means may be configured to compare the brightness of the first image with a predetermined value.
There may be a second sensor for sensing the brightness of the second image, the control means being configured to compare the brightness of the first and second images.
The system may comprise a combiner for superimposing the second image on the first image, the second sensor being configured to sense light from the combiner associated solely with the second image.
The first sensor may be configured to sense the average brightness of the first image, or of a selected area thereof.
Alternatively the first sensor may be configured to sense a maximum local brightness occurring in the first image, or the brightness of selected moving features within the first image.
The control means may be configured to control the contrast by adjusting the brightness of the first image.
Thus, the system may comprise a variable transmission filter through which light for forming the first image passes, the control means being configured to control the filter so as to as to adjust the brightness of the first image.
The first sensor may be positioned to sense said light before it passes through the filter, or it may be positioned to sense said light after it has passed through the filter.
Alternatively or in addition to the foregoing, the control means may be configured to control the contrast by adjusting the brightness of the second image.
Alternatively or in addition it may be configured to control the contrast by adjusting the colour of the second image.
The invention will now be described merely by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring to
Under some conditions additional illuminators or reflectors are present during the landing. These may be man-made (e.g. 24,
The overall effect is to increase the difficulties faced by the pilot when landing the helicopter in such “brown-out” or “white-out” conditions. As well as the inherently-limited field of view of the goggle system and loss of direct visibility due to the cloud, additional difficulty is caused by stray light being reflected from the many particles in the cloud into the NVG 10. This scattered light results in excessive scintillation and saturation of the NVG, presenting to the pilot a display of numerous bright spots of light apparently moving in sympathy with the dust cloud. In addition the scintillations may appear to be modulated by the aircraft rotor frequency. Such NVG output can prevent the pilot from obtaining any usable view of the outside world and the immediate landing area. Additionally the movement of the light spots visible in the NVG tends to cause disorientation and further to interfere with the pilot's ability to read the data image even if the outside-world image is not fully obscured.
When the NVG saturates, the second (data) image from the display device 14 as well as the outside-world image is lost to the pilot. This occurs because the light particles representing both the data image and the outside world pass through the NVG 10 and are processed in exactly the same way. Both are lost in the excessively-brightened randomised background, increasing the difficulty and hazard associated with the landing manoeuvre.
The present invention takes advantage of the fact that the data image does not pass through the NVG 10, and seeks to ensure that a minimum contrast either in relative brightness (intensity) or colour or both is maintained between the field-of-view image and the data image so that the data image is always available to the pilot even in conditions of brown-out or white-out.
The light output of the NVG 10 is sampled by a suitable sensor or camera 30, the output of which, once characterised in a signal conditioner 32 to take account the sensor calibration parameters, is used in an estimator and normaliser 34 to determine the intensity (relative brightness) of the NVG image. Depending upon the sophistication of the sensor employed this brightness may for example be calculated as an average of the whole display, or a particular area, or may be factored to account for particle movement or individual bright spots. The required contrast between the display and the NVG device output is set manually at 36 by the pilot and is compared with the measured and normalised NVG image brightness to create a brightness demand for the data image. This demand is factored in a gamma decoder 38 to account for the gamma of the image combiner 28 and used to set the display illumination level.
The time response of the control loop may be adjusted to prevent the pilot from being distracted by a too rapid or slow contrast adjustment.
If the relationship between the output of the driver 16 and the brightness of the data display is known and stable, then a simpler alternative is to take feedback from the display illumination drive electronics and apply this to the intensity estimator 34′ as shown by dotted line 44 in
Additionally the display feedback loop described here may be utilised as part of a monitoring system for high integrity applications, where for example the data display carries safety critical primary flight information.
The embodiments described so far do not directly affect the output from the NVG 10 and therefore cannot turn off or degrade the pilot's primary night vision display through a fault or other reason. They will not therefore place the pilot or aircraft at hazard by inadvertently blanking the pilots outside world view. However there is an advantage in controlling the amount of light emitted from the NVG 10 in order to limit or reduce it under the conditions considered for this invention.
A further alternative is to embody a brightness or gain control mechanism into the NVG 10, replacing the transmission filter 46 of
A further refinement is to combine the NVG output control described with reference to
Perceived colour may be used to increase the differentiation between the NVG and data displays.
The architecture of such a system can be similar to that of
Although described in the context of a display system for a helicopter pilot, the invention may also be useful for pilots of other aircraft, including for example vertical or short take-off or landing (V/STOL) aircraft, and for remote operators of unmanned aerial vehicles and other remoted-controlled vehicles. It may also be of use for other aircrew or for military personnel for example for drivers or other crew of military vehicles or in helmet-mounted or head-mounted systems for infantrymen. It further may be of use in indirect-vision gun sights or other sighting devices for ordnance such as missiles, anti-tank weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, for example (but not exclusively) for infantry use. In such an embodiment, the first imaging means 10 is aligned with the boresight of the gun or weapon launcher.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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082540865 | Dec 2008 | EP | regional |
08232001 | Dec 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2009/051726 | 12/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/20/2011 |