THIS INVENTION relates to microwave, millimetre wave, sub-millimetre wave or infrared imaging systems, such as, for example, the systems proposed by the inventor in WO03/012524 or WO03/075554.
Passive mm-wave imaging has the potential for detecting concealed weapons because clothing is in general transparent and metal objects have a high reflectivity (˜100%), particularly when compared with the reflectivity of skin which is of the order of 50%.
Clouds are largely transparent in the mm-wave region and the sky temperature is close to that of liquid nitrogen (100K). Highly reflective objects tend to reflect this cold sky while highly emissive objects radiate at their black body temperature (˜300K). Thus there is a 200K temperature difference between apparent temperature of a highly reflective surface and a highly emissive surface.
This difference in apparent temperature provides a contrast in a mm-wave image, which can be used to detect concealed metal and dielectric objects.
Frequently observers would like to detect concealed weapons on a person when that person is inside a building or in a confined space where cold sky reflections are not possible or are restricted and where ambient illumination of the subject being scanned is provided by surfaces which may be at a temperature much closer to, or even higher than, say, the body temperature of a human subject being scanned, so that contrast in the, resulting image is much reduced.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a solution to the above-noted problem.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of illuminating subjects to be imaged by a microwave, millimetre wave or infrared passive imaging system, comprising directing, onto the subject to be imaged, the image or shadow, as herein defined, of a cold source, i.e. a source with a low black body temperature, or of a hot source, i.e. a source with a black body temperature significantly higher than that of the subject to be imaged.
According to another aspect of the invention there is provided imaging apparatus for passive microwave, millimetre wave or infrared imaging, including a receiver for microwave, millimetre wave or infrared radiation from the scene or subject being imaged, directing means for directing such radiation onto the receiver, a cold source or a hot source, i.e. a source with a low or high black body temperature, and means for directing the image or shadow, as herein defined, of said cold source or hot source onto the scene or subject being imaged.
In operation of the invention using a cold source, the cold source can be thought of as directing “cold” radiation onto the subject from the cold source, and the apparatus can be thought of as directing the image or shadow of the cold source onto the subject to be imaged. From another point of view, the cold source is effectively absorbing radiation emanating from the subject, without re-emitting that radiation, with the result that radiation emanating from the imaging apparatus, or from objects close to the latter, and reflected (e.g. by metal items carried by the subject) back towards the imaging apparatus, is much reduced, as compared with what would be the case if the apparent black body temperature of the imaging device corresponded to the room temperature in the building where the imaging is being carried out, so that contrast in the image is significantly improved. Arrangements in which contrast is improved in this way are herein referred to, for convenience, as arrangements in which the image or shadow of the cold source is directed to the subject or scene being scanned.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a cold source is used comprising a emissive body, e.g. a metal block or panel with a black surface, the block or panel being artificially cooled, e.g. by liquid nitrogen.
Alternatively, it would be possible, in accordance with the present invention, to use instead of the cold source, a hot source, i.e. an emissive body with a temperature significantly higher than the body temperature of the subject being scanned, and in which radiation from the hot source is directed onto the subject being scanned, to be substantially absorbed by, for example, the clothing and skin of the subject but to be reflected from metal objects carried on the body of the subject, such as concealed weapons etc., thereby again increasing contrast, (although in this case, of course, the metal objects will appear as being brighter, rather than darker, than the other parts of the subject in the resulting image). Thus, in this alternative arrangement it is convenient to regard the image or shadow of the hot source as being directed onto the subject or scene being scanned.
As indicated above, microwave, mm-wave and infrared imaging works well in the open when objects are able to reflect the cold sky. The imaging apparatus used in such imaging detects changes in reflectivity from point to point in the scene imaged. This situation is analogous to visible-light imaging on a bright cloudy day, except that in visible-light imaging a reflective surface may reflect radiation from the sun, while in mm-wave imaging, for example, a reflective surface in the open is likely to reflect the lack of radiation from the cold sky.
Inside a building it may be necessary to use artificial illumination for mm-wave cameras as for visible light imaging. In visible-light imaging it may be sufficient to use a single source of radiation since most surfaces of interest scatter the incident radiation. In the mm-wave region however objects in a scene being imaged tend to be more specularly reflecting, so that radiation from an illumination source does not necessarily reflect towards a nun-wave camera.
It is among the objects of the present invention, in further aspects, to provide an illuminating method and an illuminating and imaging apparatus by which the last-noted disadvantage may be avoided or mitigated.
According to one such further aspect of the invention there is provided a method of illuminating an object by radiation in the microwave, millimetre wave or infrared ranges for imaging by an imaging device, comprising arranging a retroreflector, such as a cube-corner reflective array facing the object and disposed laterally with respect of the line of sight between the object and the imaging device and directing such radiation onto the object, from a radiation source, along a path corresponding to or close to said line of sight, whereby light from said source, reflected laterally from the object, will be reflected, in turn, by the cube-corner array, back substantially along the path which it followed from the object to the cube-corner array, to be reflected in turn, by the object, back to the imaging device.
According to another such further aspect of the invention, there is provided apparatus for illuminating and imaging an object in an object area by radiation in the microwave, millimetre wave or infrared ranges, comprising an imaging device, a source of such radiation, a retroreflector such as a cube-corner reflective array arranged facing said object area and means for directing such radiation from the radiation source towards said object area along a path corresponding to the line of sight of the imaging device.
Embodiments of the invention are described below with reference to the accompanying drawing in which:
The receiver arrangement shown in
Referring to
In the arrangement of
In general, the image or shadow of the cold source may be directed onto the scene or subject being imaged, and radiation from that scene or subject directed onto the receiver 10, via a conventional circulator, or via a wire grid polariser and quarter wave reflector or transmitter in combination, or via a wire grid polariser and a Faraday rotator in combination.
The cold source 16 may be replaced by a hot source, i.e. an emissive body with a temperature significantly higher than the temperature of the body being scanned or of the bodies in the scene being scanned. In this case, reflective items carried by a human subject will appear significantly lighter or brighter, in the resulting image, than areas of flesh or skin of a human subject.
The configuration described with reference to
As indicated above, microwave, mm-wave and infrared imaging works well in the open when objects are able to reflect the cold sky. The imaging apparatus used in such imaging detects changes in reflectivity from point to point in the scene imaged. This situation is analogous to visible-light imaging on a bright cloudy day, except that in visible-light imaging a reflective surface may reflect radiation from the sun, while in mm-wave imaging, for example, a reflective surface in the open is likely to reflect the lack of radiation from the cold sky.
Inside a building it may be necessary to use artificial illumination for mm-wave cameras as for visible light imaging. In visible-light imaging it may be sufficient to use a single source of radiation since most surfaces of interest scatter the incident radiation. In the mm-wave region however objects in a scene being imaged tend to be more specularly reflecting, so that radiation from an illumination source does not necessarily reflect towards a mm-wave camera.
It is among the objects of the present invention, in further aspects, to provide an illuminating method and an illuminating and imaging apparatus by which the last-noted disadvantage may be avoided or mitigated.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an artificial environment within which active illumination from a hot or cold source is made to reflect from an object towards a mm-wave, microwave or infrared camera.
Referring to
The reflective structure 104 may take any of several forms. For example, it may comprise a layer of transparent beads or spheres on a supporting substrate, i.e. the equivalent, at the wavelengths concerned, of the reflective glass-bead-loaded coatings used in road signs and the like. Preferably, however the retroreflective structure may consist of an array of reflective corner-cubes. A reflective corner-cube such as illustrated at 50 in
Where the imaging device 100 is of the scanning type, in which radiation from a relatively extended field of view is scanned raster-fashion into a stationary radiation receiver or linear array of stationary receivers as described above or as described in WO03/012524, then, reciprocally, radiation from a radiation source located, (or apparently located), at the receiver can conversely be scanned, by the same operation of the scanning apparatus, over the object to be imaged, so that, at any instant, the part of the image being illuminated can also be the part being “viewed” by the receiver. It will be appreciated that such an arrangement may be realized by using a beam splitter or the like arrangement which may be employed to bring the path of the beam from the illumination source, and the line of sight of the radiation receiver, into alignment.
When used in this specification and claims, the terms “comprises” and “comprising” and variations thereof mean that the specified features, steps or integers are included. The terms are not to be interpreted to exclude the presence of other features, steps or components.
The features disclosed in the foregoing description, or the following claims, or the accompanying drawings, expressed in their specific forms or in terms of a means for performing the disclosed function, or a method or process for attaining the disclosed result, as appropriate, may, separately, or in any combination of such features, be utilized for realizing the invention in diverse forms thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0401389.2 | Jan 2004 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB05/00239 | 1/21/2005 | WO | 1/12/2007 |