This is a national phase application under 35 U.S.C. ยง371 of PCT Application No. PCT/FR2009/052293, filed Nov. 25, 2009. which claims the benefit of French application No. 08/06758 filed Dec. 2, 2008, the contents of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a method and a system for detecting improvised explosive devices (EEI) or the like.
It is known that improvised explosive devices are more and more used for booby-trapping a path, such as a road or a lane and the verges thereof, of a conflict area, as they are easily concealed as a result of their small size and they could he designed and manufactured quite easily and traditionally from commercially available components and/or components mounted on commodity materials and devices being diverted from their initial application. Therefore, they are an important threat for civil or military vehicles and individuals, which follow such booby-trapped paths.
In order to secure such a road or lane, destructive systems could be used, being coupled to motorised vehicles and based on decoying or neutralization mechanisms triggering, when they drive on such devices, the explosion of their explosive, resulting furthermore in a damage of part of such non destructive mechanisms or systems relating to the present method, system and device and allowing explosive devices to be detected and thus, said devices to be located from, amongst others, X-rays or neutron analyses.
However, such systems are difficult to be applied to a vehicle intended for detecting explosive devices because, more specifically:
The present method, system and device aim at overcoming such drawbacks and relates to a method and a system for detecting improvised explosive devices, which can be usable on a moving vehicle while being not constrained to the individuals present in the vehicle or close to the latter.
To this end, the method for detecting improvised explosive devices or the e like, partially or totally concealed on a path or in the vicinity of the latter, from a vehicle following said path, is remarkable, according to the present method, system and device, in that it is of the image correlation type and consisting, upon a detection mission:
Thus, thanks to the present method, system and device, the method for detecting through image correlation is completely passive as it does not emit any hazardous radiation and is not consequently submitted to regulatory constraints of use, so that it can be technically very easily implemented. Such an image analysis method allows a change to be noticed in the current image, as compared to an earlier image, which change could correspond to the presence of an explosive device, and consequently operates in real time with a moving vehicle.
Preferably, in order to obtain an optimum analysis of the path followed by the vehicle, the method comprises the steps of replacing one current image out of two by one earlier image and successively displaying said thus alternating current images and earlier images. Alternated groups of images (of more of two images) could also be displayed. Any change between the images (or groups of images) representative of the road and its surroundings is thus emphasized, step by step, along the path, enabling to secure it to the best.
Advantageously, the method further comprises, before said current images and earlier images are displayed, fixing the geographical position of said successive current and earlier images, so that fixed points of said successive images match.
The present method, system and device also relate to a system for detecting improvised explosive devices or the like, intended for implementing the previously defined method.
To this end, the system is remarkable in that it comprises:
Thus, such a system is easily integrated into a vehicle as a result of its reduced size and furthermore consumes little energy for its operation, as its shooting source is a simple camera and its displaying device a monitor. The detecting range of the system could be high as it depends on the resolution of the sensor and of the features of the objective lens of the camera. A range of some tens to some hundreds of metres is thus achievable as a function of the size of the objects to be detected.
Advantageously, said processing device replaces one current image out of two taken by said source with one previous image from said data base, so as to visualize on said displaying device, an alternated succession of said current and earlier images.
According to another feature, the system further comprises a means for fixing the geographical position of two respectively successive and earlier images, so that fixed points of said images match.
Preferably, said earlier image data base contains images supplied by the same shooting source, so imparting a high reliability to the system.
Furthermore, said current images supplied by said source are sent into said data base, so that the latter is regularly updated each time the vehicle follows the path.
The sole FIGURE of the appended drawing will better explain how the present method, system and device can be implemented.
The FIGURE schematically shows the system for detecting improvised explosive devices implementing the method according to the present method, system and device.
The detection system 1 according to the present disclosure is mounted on-board a vehicle 2 generally of the military type, symbolized with a rectangular mixed line and following a path (road or lane) likely to comprise improvised explosive devices that could be either totally or partially buried and/or concealed in the road or on the verges thereof.
To this end, the system comprises, as will he described in detail herein under, a shooting source 3 of current images I, a data base 4 of reference earlier images IA of said path, an image processing device 5, a fixing image means 6 and a display device 7.
In particular, the shooting source 3 is a camera 3A on-board the vehicle 2 and allowing to take the current images I of the path and to thereby visualize on the display device 7 the road and the verges of the path followed by the vehicle, so as to deliver in real time and continuously, the current images of the path.
The data base 4 contains earlier images IA of the same path, but previously filmed and contained on any appropriate storing computer medium integrated into the vehicle. Such images could have been taken by the same camera upon a previous passage on the same path.
The image processing device 5 is connected to the camera 3A and to the data base 4 and thereby receives the information (images I and IA) sent by the camera 3A and the data base 4. The processing device 5 aims at replacing the current images I delivered by the camera by removing and then substituting the removed current images with earlier images IA supplied by the data base 4 and located at the same point. In order to optimize the detection of explosive devices along the path, one current image I out of two is replaced with one earlier image IA, so that the alternate display of the current images I of the camera and of the earlier images IA of the data base could allow to immediately see the changes having occurred along the current path, as compared to the pre-recorded one. For visualizing this, the display device 7 is for instance a viewing monitor 7A.
Thus, as shown on the FIGURE, the two supplied images, respectively the current I and the earlier IA ones, at a given instant at a same point, might not be perfectly identical, as far as their spatial geographic position is concerned. It is due more particularly to the fact that the vehicles do not follow exactly the same way along the path and or the cameras are not arranged at the same point on the vehicles. It can thus be seen that the road R of the path IT with its two trees AR of the current image I delivered by the camera 3A is slightly offset to the right as compared to the same road R of the path IT with the same two trees AR of the earlier image IA delivered by the data base 4, said road being located in the middle of the earlier image IA.
The system 1 of the present disclosure contemplates this and its fixing means 6 could consist in several interventions, for instance: either fixing the current image I filmed by the camera 3A with that IA of the data base 4 from the position of the vehicle or from both the position of the vehicle and the orientation of the camera, so as to superimpose said images I and IA, or using an equipment belonging to the detection system 1 or using a specific equipment of the vehicle, such as a satellite positioning system, an inertial unit, if it has any, such an equipment allowing to know where the images I and IA have been taken, thereby facilitating the fixing thereof. As shown in the
Such a fixing of the current images I and the earlier images IA is also necessary for ensuring a good visual comfort to the operator being in charge of monitoring the images alternately scrolling on the viewing monitor 7A.
The thus described system 1 could spot, through image correlation, any change occurring between successive images scrolling on the monitor 7A. For instance, it can he seen that on the current image I shown and delivered by the camera 3A, as well as on the fixed image IR on the monitor 7A, there is a black spot T, on the left verge of the road R, whereas it does not occur on the earlier image IA. Thus, thanks to the alternate display of current and earlier images in the data base, the operator sees some flickering on the monitor 7A representative of the change between the successive images and corresponding in the example to the spot T, which might be an improvised explosive device. Should this be the case, the latter being thereby detected is then neutralized.
During or at the end of the mission of the vehicle, the images taken by the camera during the move are used to fill, via a link 8, the data base 4, being thereby updated. Replacing old images with recent images allows not the slow natural changes in the landscape to be considered, such as, for instance, those of the vegetation.
In order to aid the operator in construing, the image processing device 5 could be automatically carried out for detecting and emphasizing the elements having been modified in the landscape.
Furthermore, the image processing device 5 could also act on the images so as to reduce the effect of variations of brightness or of shadows being cast between the two images that have been taken at different instants.
The referenced image data base 4 could obviously been shared between several vehicles able to follow for instance the same portion of the path.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08 06758 | Dec 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2009/052293 | 11/25/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/1/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/063920 | 6/10/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20070061076 | Shulman | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20080204571 | Hoglund et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 103 901 | Feb 1983 | GB |
2103901 | Feb 1983 | GB |
2 243 266 | Oct 1991 | GB |
2 439 627 | Jan 2008 | GB |
2439627 | Jan 2008 | GB |
10 307110 | Nov 1998 | JP |
9 510 950 | Jul 1996 | ZA |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report completed Mar. 22, 2010 and mailed Mar. 30, 2010 from corresponding International Application No. PCT/FR2009/052293, filed Nov. 25, 2009 (6 pages). |
Written Opinion completed Mar. 22, 2010 and mailed Mar. 30, 2010 from corresponding International Application No. PCT/FR2009/052293, filed Nov. 25, 2009 (12 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110228090 A1 | Sep 2011 | US |