This invention relates generally to locating objects, and more particularly to locating moving objects using maximum length sequences.
In many applications, it is necessary to locate an object reliably with a high accuracy. For example, in an elevator system, the location of the elevator car must be measured within +/−10 cm between floors and within +/−1 cm at each floor. To achieve this accuracy, elevator systems employs a large number of location sensors in the form of switches. The installation and maintenance of switches is time consuming and costly. In addition, it is difficult to determine the location of the elevator car between floors, where there are no switches, in emergency situations.
The embodiments of the invention provides a method for determining a location of a moving object using a signal encoded in a substrate according to a maximum length sequence (MLS).
In one embodiment, a radio frequency (RF) signal is transmitted through a leaky coaxial cable having slits spaced apart according the MLS. An RF sensor at the moving object detects subsequences of the RF signals. A decoder correlates the subsequences of the MLS as the object moves along the cable. The subsequences are unique for each location along the cable. In one application the cable is placed on a wall in an elevator shaft, and the RF sensor is arranged on an elevator car.
In another embodiment, the MLS is used to construct a binary arrangement of white and black marks on a surface, such as a road or elevator shaft. In this case, a camera sensor at the moving object detects the subsequences for the decoder. The arrangement can be multi-dimensional.
The MLS has been used for measuring impulse responses, encryption, simulation, correlation technique, time-of-flight spectroscopy, and for synchronizing terminals in direct-sequence spread spectrum and frequency-hopping spread spectrum transmission networks.
We use the MLS to locate objects.
V(k)=c((k−1)mod 2M−1)+1,
where mod is the modulo operator.
An object 220 is placed along the physical arrangement on the coaxial cable. The object includes a RF sensor (receiver) 221 with a set (one or more) of N antennas (c1-c4). The antennas are also spaced at the distances d. The sensor detects subsequences of N bits using the RF signals f1-f4 230, e.g., a subsequence of bits {00111}.
The subsequence is unique for every location k, where 1≦k≦2M+M−N−1, along the MLS physically encoded in the cable when N≧M. A decoder associates the location of the subsequence with the object. If the object is moving, the decoder can determine multiple locations.
Received signals f3-f4 aligned with slits have a much greater power than the signal f1 and f2 that are not aligned with a slit. A processor 250 includes a decoder 255 for correlating the subsequence 230 with the MLS 210 to determine the location 260 of the moving object.
It should be noted that the transmitter and sensor can be reversed, i.e., the object includes a transmitter and the set of antennas, and the coaxial cable receives the RF signals. In the reverse scenario, the antennas transmit the different RF signals (f1-f4), and the slits allow only certain signals to be combined and be detected by the sensor at one end of the cable.
As shown in
As shown in
While the MLS can be used to decode one-dimensional locations, a direct application of MLS for two-dimensional locations is difficult. Hence, we describe differential MLS for obtaining multi-dimensional locations, as shown in
In one dimension, the differential MLS is constructed using a MLS with M states and 2M−1, C1=c11, c21, c31, . . . , c2
where ⊕ denotes the XOR operation. The differential MLS changes values of consecutive bits when the corresponding MLS has a value ‘1’, and remains unchanged when the corresponding MLS has a value ‘0’. For example, an MLS with M=4 is 101100100011110, and the corresponding one-dimensional differential MLS is 0110111000010100, using an initial value of 0 for bit 0.
c
i
1
=d
i
⊕d
i−1 ∀1≦i≦2M−1. (2)
In this implementation, the sensor detects a subsequence of at least M+1 bits of the differential MLS, and the decoder performs an XOR operation on adjacent bits to determine the location according to Equation (2).
The two-dimensional differential MLS of
d
i,j
=c
i
2
⊕d
i−1,j ∀1≦i≦2M
where d0,j is the 1-dimensional differential MLS C1 in Equation (1). For the same column, the bits on consecutive rows of the differential 2-D MLS change when the corresponding MLS C2 takes on the value ‘1’, and the bits on consecutive rows of differential 2-D MLS are unchanged when the corresponding MLS takes on the value ‘0’.
To determine a 2-D location, the sensor detects M+1 consecutive bits in each dimension to be decoded. The decoder can also decode one bit at a time, similar as shown for
In general, a Q-dimensional differential MLS, where Q≧2, can be constructed iteratively using the (Q−1)-dimensional differential MLS. If the (Q−1)-dimensional differential MLS is dX, where X is a (Q−1)-dimensional vector, and a Q-dimensional differential MLS corresponding to the MLS CQ generated using MQ states is di,X, then the Q-dimensional differential MLS is
d
i,X
=c
i
Q
⊕d
i−1,X ∀1≦i≦2M
where Sj={0, 1, . . . , Mj}
The decoder infers Mj consecutive bits in dimension j, for all j=1, 2, . . . , Q. The XOR operation is used to determine the Q-dimensional location.
The ‘1’ of the differential code can be represented as a slit in the leaky coaxial cable, or a white mark. The ‘0’s can be represented by no slit in the cable or a black mark. The MLS can also be displayed or projected as an arrangement of pixels on a screen. The bits can also be magnetically encoded, or as colors on a displayed image.
Although the invention has been described by way of examples of preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that various other adaptations and modifications may be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, it is the object of the appended claims to cover all such variations and modifications as come within the true spirit and scope of the invention.