1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to systems for providing a command link between a transmitter and a moving object.
2. Description of the Related Art
It is often necessary to convey information between a transmitter and a moving object. For example, guidance data might need to be provided to a moving object such as a guided projectile. In such cases, it is necessary to establish a ‘command link’ between a transmitter which may be stationary or moving, and the moving object. However, a receiver on a moving object is likely to have a small dynamic range (<25 dB), while the transmitted data may be subject to large dynamic range variations due to, for example, atmospheric conditions and rapid change in the distance between the transmitter and the moving objects. This can make it difficult to establish and maintain a command link with a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
A moving object command link system and method is presented which addresses several of the problems noted above.
The present system is for creating a command link between a transmitter and one or more objects, at least one of which is moving and capable of receiving commands via a free space link. The system includes a source which outputs a beam of electromagnetic (EM) radiation, and a steering mechanism arranged to direct the EM beam toward one or more of the objects. The beam may be a pulsed laser beam, or another form of EM radiation such as RF. The system may include a variable attenuator arranged to modulate the average output power of the beam, and/or a divergence controller arranged to maintain a desired beam size at the at least one moving object. The divergence controller may include a storage means into which a divergence profile is loaded which represents a desired beam size over time.
When the transmitted beam is a laser, the system can include a detector, an array of detectors, and/or a camera arranged to receive light reflected from the at least one moving object. Then, a variable optical attenuator (VOA) can be used to modulate the average output power of the laser beam based on the brightness of the reflected light.
The transmitted beam may be linearly polarized, and the system may further include a polarization modulator which operates to change the polarization of the EM beam in accordance with a predetermined sequence and schedule.
The system can be arranged to track multiple objects, at least one of which is moving. For example, a 1×2 switch may be employed to selectively provide the beam to one of first and second outputs, with first and second object tracking mirrors coupled to receive the outputs and to direct them toward first and second objects, respectively.
The system may further include first and second object track cameras having respective boresights that are offset with respect to each other, and a dichroic beam splitter. Beams sent or reflected from the first and second objects are directed to the dichroic beam splitter, which couples them to the first and second object track cameras, respectively. The dichroic beam splitter is preferably tiltable, with the system arranged to adjust the tilt as needed to accommodate an angular offset between the first and second object beams. The dichroic beam splitter is preferably further arranged to transmit incoming light that is within a first spectral band to the first object track camera and to reflect incoming light that is within a second spectral band to the second object track camera. Means of calibrating the system, and of suppressing platform disturbance, are also described.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following drawings, description, and claims.
A basic system for creating a command link between a transmitter and one or more objects, at least one of which is moving, is shown in
However, as noted above, a number of problems are inherent in such a system. For example, the receiver on moving object 10 is likely to have a limited dynamic range (<25 dB), while the transmitted data may be subject to large dynamic range variations due to, for example, atmospheric conditions and rapid change in distance between the transmitter and receiver. This can make it difficult to maintain a command link with a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The present system provides a number of ways in which these problems and others may be addressed, such that the accuracy and reliability of the command link is improved.
The components shown in
The moving object(s) are typically arranged to return a signal, typically via reflection, preferably using a retroreflector. The present system may include a detector, an array of detectors, and/or a camera arranged to receive the signal reflected from the moving object. The intensity of the reflected signal is indicative of the amplitude of the signal detected at the receiver. Thus, the variable attenuator may be arranged to modulate the average output power of beam 14 based on the intensity of the reflected signal, to ensure that the amplitude of the beam received at the receiver is at a suitable level. For example, when the generated beam 14 is a laser, variable attenuator 18 is a variable optical attenuator (VOA), which may be arranged to modulate the average output power of laser beam 14 based on the brightness of the reflected light-boosting the beam's power if the detected signal is too weak (i.e., below the receiver's noise floor), or reducing the beam's power if the detected signal is too strong (i.e., receiver is saturated).
The output of variable attenuator 18 is preferably coupled to a collimator 20 via free space or optical fiber, with the collimator output 22 coupled to a divergence controller 24 via free space. The collimator and divergence controller are arranged to maintain a desired beam size—preferably a fixed size—at the moving object on which the EM beam is directed. As the distance between the transmitter and the moving object changes over time, divergence controller 24 might be arranged to provide a beam at the moving object which has a size that varies with time, or a size that varies with distance.
One possible implementation of divergence controller 24 is shown in
Divergence controller 24 might also include a storage means (not shown) into which a divergence profile is loaded which represents a desired beam size over time. The divergence controller would be operated in response to the divergence profile to control the divergence of the EM beam over time so as to maintain the beam at an approximately fixed size at the moving object as it travels away from the transmitter. The profile would typically be based on distance, and might additionally be based on the geometry of the trajectory of the moving object. An encoder and an actuator reporting and controlling the position of lens 30, respectively, could be operated in a closed loop to execute the stored divergence profile.
An example of such a divergence profile is illustrated in
Another approach could be to have the EM beam go from wider to narrower as the moving object travels away from the transmitter. By being wider when the moving object is first launched, acquisition of the beam by a receiver on the moving object is made easier. A wider beam can also help to prevent saturation of the receiver.
Referring back to
In some applications, a receiver on the moving object may include a phase-locked-loop (PLL) circuit. For example, some systems may be arranged to track the rotational orientation of the moving object using, for example, an ellipsometric detector capable of detecting a polarized EM beam generated by source 12. The ellipsometric detector is arranged to measure the polarization state of the detected beam, which is used to indicate the rotational orientation of the moving object with respect to the predefined coordinate system. An example of such a system is described in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/172,745. A PLL circuit (not shown) may be incorporated into a receiver on the moving object and used to track the object's rotational orientation and thereby mitigate any degradation in the accuracy of the rotational orientation determination that might otherwise occur if the polarized EM beam is disrupted.
However, the PLL circuit can work poorly if the object is not spinning or is spinning slowly. This issue can be addressed with the use of polarization modulation. As discussed above, the polarization modulator 36 would typically be arranged to alter the polarization of beam 38 in accordance with a sequence/schedule; this sequence/schedule would also be known by the receiver. Modulating the polarization in this way serves to improve the operation of the PLL and thereby the tracking of the object's rotational orientation.
Note that, as an alternative to having the polarization modulation sequence/schedule be known to the receiver, the system could be arranged such that the source encodes the polarization state of the beam in the transmitted beam itself; the receiver would then be arranged to decode the encoded polarization state.
The amplitude modulation (AM) that might be provided by a variable attenuator 18 and the polarization modulation that might be provided by polarization modulator 36 are illustrated in
AM is used to increase the dynamic range of the command link to make it tolerant to large signal fluctuations like those caused by large atmospheric turbulence. Transmitting the EM beam at multiple intensity levels as shown in
Referring again to
A system configuration arranged to provide a command link to two objects, at least one of which is a moving object, is shown in
The moving object might be, for example, a projectile that is being guided using the command link, and the second object might be, for example, a target to which the projectile is being directed. In this case, the EM beam directed to the target object is not providing a command link to the target, but rather is used to track the position of the target. The use of 1×2 switch 50 and two separate tracking mirrors 56 and 58 allow the EM beam 14 generated by source 12 to be intermittently re-directed to the target object, to determine its range, for example. Depending on the particular application, the 1×2 switch could be toggled occasionally, on an as-needed basis, or made to toggle rapidly between its two outputs. Using a laser for beam 14 enables the target to be easily tracked at night. The positions of the tracking mirrors could be controlled by respective actuators and reported using respective encoders, such that their positions can be precisely controlled using respective closed loops, thereby enabling the directing of the 1×2 switch outputs toward the first and second objects to be maintained over time.
The configuration shown in
Another possible system configuration is shown in
In some applications, such as when the first and second objects are a target and a guided projectile, the angular spread between the objects at launch may be great. However, track cameras such as cameras 70 and 72 would typically have a high resolution and a narrow field-of-view (FOV), typically less than 6 degrees, which can make it difficult to acquire the objects they are to track. To address this issue, the system may include a wide FOV camera 80 with a field of view that is typically greater than 6 degrees, which enables a robust and early acquisition of one or both objects; the acquired positions can then be handed off to the track cameras. Early acquisition of the objects enables the command link to be established early in flight, with pointing of the transmitted beam maintained by wide FOV camera 80 well before the objects enter the FOVs of the track cameras. The system can be further arranged such that the position of steerable mirror 78 is at least in part controlled by wide FOV camera 80.
Dichroic beam splitter 76 is preferably tiltable, with the system arranged to adjust the tilt as needed to accommodate an angular offset between the first object beam and the second object beam. If the trajectories of the two objects become such that the angular separation between them exceeds the FOV of the track cameras, then the cameras need to be pointed at the objects separately so that acquisition of the objects is not lost. Tilting dichroic beam splitter 76 essentially allows second object track camera 72 to be pointed independently of first object track camera 70.
The dichroic beam splitter may be further arranged to transmit incoming light that is within a first spectral band to first object track camera 70, and to reflect incoming light that is within a second spectral band to second object track camera 72. When so arranged, two wavelengths, one of which may be a laser, can be used to communicate with and/or track the first and second objects. For example, an SWIR wavelength could be used to perform active tracking of a guided projectile tracked with second object track camera 72, and a VIS or NWIR wavelength could be used to perform passive tracking of a target tracked with first object track camera 70. This might be especially beneficial if tracking an object passively (i.e., without it being illuminated with a laser), in which case a shorter wavelength is preferred.
The system might further include a range finding detector 82. The range finding detector could be coupled to an output of dichroic beam splitter 76 via a beam splitter 84 and a mirror 86, with beam splitter 84 receiving the dichroic beam splitter output and conveying it to both second object track camera 72 and range finding detector 82 (via mirror 86). The range finding detector is preferably arranged to measure the ranges to both the first and second objects, which is accomplished by switching the source beam back and forth between the objects. If beam splitter 84 is steerable, it can have a narrower FOV than if fixed.
A system as described herein can be calibrated in a number of different ways. One method is illustrated in
Another calibration method is illustrated in
Two set of functional fits are generated: one which correlates the Vx and Vy values to the multiple Px1, Py1 values, and one which correlates the Vx and Vy values to the multiple Px2, Py2 values. This enables the following relationships to be defined:
Vx=Fx1(Px1,Py1) and Vy=Fy1(Px1,Py1), and
Vx=Fx2(Px2,Py2) and Vy=Fy2(Px2,Py2).
Once defined in this way, the transmitted beam can be directed to a given pixel location (Px1, Py1) at track camera 70 or a given pixel location (Px2, Py2) at track camera 72.
A system as configured in
The embodiments of the invention described herein are exemplary and numerous modifications, variations and rearrangements can be readily envisioned to achieve substantially equivalent results, all of which are intended to be embraced within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This invention was made with Government support under Department of Defense contract HR0011-09-C-0016. The Government has certain rights in this invention.