1. Field of the Invention
The application is in the field for seekers in moving bodies for target acquisition and for guidance of the bodies.
2. Description of the Related Art
Seekers have long been used in munitions such as missiles in order to acquire targets, and for other guidance procedures. Multiple mode seekers, which acquire data using multiple wavelengths of energy, have also been used. Such sensors respond to both infrared and microwave radiation, for instance. Such seekers have been generally located at the nose of aircraft or missiles, in order to obtain an unobstructed field of view. Seekers have generally been placed within a window at the nose of the vehicle.
Improvements over prior seekers would in general be desirable.
Unlike prior seekers, which have utilized a fixed window with detectors and optics within the window able to tilt relative to the window, seekers are described herein in which the forward window, detectors, and optics all tilt as a unit. The prior fixed-window systems limit the practical window shapes, due to a need to present substantially similar properties to the detectors and optics regardless of angle of tilt. This not only limits available shapes, but as a practical matter requires the fixed window to be made of the same material throughout. Further, the present fixed-window configurations limit the available locations for placement of the detectors and optics, in order to obtain performance that was largely invariant to tilting of the detectors and optics.
According to an aspect of the invention, a seeker/receiver has an optics/receiver portion that tilts as a unit. The optics/receiver portion includes an optical window that is part of an outside surface of the moving body that the seeker/receiver is part of.
According to another aspect of the invention, an optical window for a seeker has a shape that is not a portion of a sphere. The shape may be flat, an ellipsoid, a segmented shape, or other non-spherical shapes.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, an optical window for a multiple frequency seeker has different materials and/or different optical properties in different portions.
According to a further aspect of the invention, a multimode seeker for a moving body includes: a laser energy receiver for detecting incoming laser energy; an imaging infrared (IIR) receiver for detecting incoming infrared energy; an optical window through which at least the infrared energy passes before reaching the IIR receiver; and a tilt mechanism for tilting the laser energy receiver, the IIR receiver, and the optical window, as a unit, relative to other parts of the moving body.
According to a still further aspect of the invention, a multimode seeker for a moving body includes: a pair of receivers that preferentially detect different wavelengths of energy; an optical window through which incoming energy passes from outside of the moving body to at least one of the receivers; and a tilt mechanism for tilting the receivers and the window, as a unit, relative to other parts of the moving body.
According to another aspect of the invention, a method of operating a seeker of a moving body includes: using a tilt mechanism of the seeker to tilt as a unit a portion of the seeker, relative to the moving body, during flight of the moving body. The portion includes: a window at an external surface of the moving body; a detector for detecting incoming energy that passes through the window from outside the moving body; and optics that directs and focuses the incoming energy to the detector.
To the accomplishment of the foregoing and related ends, the invention comprises the features hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and the annexed drawings set forth in detail certain illustrative embodiments of the invention. These embodiments are indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed. Other objects, advantages and novel features of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the drawings.
In the annexed drawings, which are not necessarily to scale:
A seeker/receiver system for a moving body, such as for guiding the moving body to a target, includes an optics/receiver portion that tilts as a unit relative to other parts of the moving body. The optics/receiver portion includes a window which may be used to enclose and protect one or both of a pair of receivers or detectors, such as a laser energy detector or receiver, and an infrared energy detector or receiver. By moving the window and the receivers as a unit a set positional relationship is maintained between all of the elements of the optics/receiver portion. This simplifies the optics by obviating the need for all aspects of the window to present the same properties to energy detectors that tilt relative to it. This allows for different shapes for the window, for different materials to be used for different parts of window (for example materials selected for desirable optical properties in conjunction with the different energy detectors), and/or for placement of one of the detectors outside of the window for another of the detectors. The optics/receiver portion may be tilted using a tilt mechanism such as a gimbal.
Referring initially to
The optics/receiver portion 16 also includes an optical window 30 through which one or both of the SAL receiver 24 and the IIR receiver 26 receive signals. The tilt system 20 is used to tilt the optics/receiver portion 16, as a unit, relative to other parts of a fuselage 34 of the moving body 10. A usual configuration is for the seeker/receiver 14 to be placed at the front of the moving body 10. This is the location where the seeker/receiver is able to get the best view of potential targets, and is thus able to be most effective.
The ability of the optics/receiver portion 16 to tilt or otherwise move as a unit allows for improvements in configuration of the seeker/receiver 14. A wider range of configurations for the receivers 24 and 26 relative to the window 30 may be utilized. Additional other variations in configuration of the optics/receiver portion 16 may be made as a result of the portion 16 being able to tilt as a unit. Some of these variations are described below with regard to certain exemplary embodiments. However it will be appreciated that additional variations are possible.
In addition, further difficulties present themselves for seeker/receivers that also include a SAL detector. In such systems the SAL detector needs to tilt as well, necessitating its placement inside the fixed window 42. The SAL detector thus must image through the same fixed window 42 used by the IIR detector 44. This may result in the material for the fixed window 42 being a compromise between a material optimized for use with the SAL detector, or a material optimized for use with the IIR detector 44. Or a more expensive material, suitable for both detectors, may have to be used for the entire fixed window 42. Further, the position of the SAL detector relative to the fixed window 42 may be seriously constrained by the need to have substantially constant optical characteristics for the SAL detector as the SAL detector is tilted or rotated.
A further advantage to tilting the optics/receiver portion 66 as a unit is that correction may be made at the IIR detector 64 for variations in optical properties in different parts of the window 62. Since there is a fixed spatial relationship between the IIR detector 64 and the window 62 only one set of corrections or adjustments would be necessary.
A still further advantage is that having a movable window may enable use of smaller window. This may result in a less expensive and lighter seeker.
Other advantages may be realized when the seeker/receiver 60 is a multi-frequency seeker (also referred to as a multimode seeker), for example including a SAL detector. The SAL detector would be a part of the optics/receiver portion 66, tiltable along with the window 62 and the IIR detector 64. The SAL detector may be placed in any of a variety of locations, inside the window 62, outside of the window 62, or even in an opening in the window 62, for example in an opening at the center of the window 62, along a central axis of the seeker/receiver 60. The window 62 may have different portions optimized for the different wavelengths used by the SAL detector and the IIR detector 64, for example utilizing different materials, and/or materials with different treatments to obtain different properties. One or both of the materials may be a relatively low cost material.
The SAL detector 114 is mounted to an outside surface of the window 110. The SAL detector 114 is part of a SAL subsystem or receiver 120 that also includes a SAL filter 122 and a SAL lens 124. A suitable SAL detector may be obtained from PerkinElmer, Inc., of Freemont, Calif., USA. Energy is focused on the SAL detector 114 by the lens 124, after first passing though the SAL filter 122. The SAL filter 122 insures that most of the solar radiation does not reach the SAL detector 114. The lens 124 may be made of a material, such as zinc sulfide or zinc selenide. More broadly, the lens 124 may be made of any material that substantially passes the 1.064 μm radiation (or other radiation), another example of a material being polyetherimide.
The window 110 is shown having a dome shape, for example a portion or section of a sphere. Alternatively the window 110 may have a wide variety of other alternative shapes, some of which are discussed below in connection with other embodiments. The window 110 may be hot isostatic pressed (HIP) zinc sulfide, such as a material sold under the trademark CLEARTRAN. Such HIP-treated zinc sulfide is a multispectral chemical vapor deposited ZnS. The HIP treatment removes water, improves transmission in the near IR and visible spectrum region, by altering the chemical and crystalline structure of the ZnS, among other improvements in properties.
The IIR detector 112 is part of an IIR subsystem receiver 130. The IIR subsystem 130 also includes an IIR mirror 134, a central IIR reflector (which also could be referred to as a beam splitter or a dichroic mirror), and an IIR lens. Incoming IIR energy passes through outer portions of the dome window 110 and is reflected off of the IIR mirror 134 toward the central reflector. At the central reflector the incoming IIR energy is reflected again, toward the IIR detector 112. The IIR lens focuses this energy onto the IIR detector 112.
The mirror 134 may be made of aluminum or another suitable material or coating for reflecting IR energy. The central reflector may be made of SiO2 or another suitable material. The lens may be made of germanium or another suitable material.
Parts of the optics for the IIR subsystem 130 may be also be used by a microwave antenna 150 that transmits millimeter wave (MMW) energy. MMW energy transmitted by the antenna 150 passes through the central reflector and is reflected by the mirror 134. The reflected MMW energy passes out through the window 110, out of the seeker/receiver 100.
With reference now in addition to
An inner gimbal ring 182 is pivotally mounted to the outer gimbal ring 162, to allow the inner gimbal ring 182 to tilt relative to the outer gimbal ring 162. The gimbal rings 162 and 182 are coupled together at respective sets of holes 184 and 186. An azimuth motor 190 is attached to the outer gimbal ring 162. A shaft 192 of the motor 190 protrudes through one of the holes 184, and is coupled to the inner gimbal ring 182 at a corresponding one of the holes 186. The azimuth motor 190 is used to tilt or pivot the inner gimbal ring 182 relative to the outer gimbal ring 162. An azimuth position sensor 194 is coupled to the opposite end of the gimbal rings 162 and 182. The azimuth position sensor 194 is used to measure the azimuth position of the inner gimbal ring 182. The azimuth motor 190 may be controlled in a manner similar to that of the elevation motor 170. The azimuth position sensor 194 may have its data utilized in a manner similar to that of the elevation position sensor 174. The azimuth motor 190 and the azimuth position sensor 194 are attached to opposite sides of the outer gimbal ring 162, such as by use of screws 196.
The optics/receiver portion 102 (
The seeker 100 is thus tiltable in a pair of orthogonal directions, in elevation and azimuth. It will be appreciated that configuration shown in
The optical window 210″ shown in
It will be appreciated that any of the configurations shown in
An optics/receiver portion 304 of the seeker/receiver 300 is similar in many respects to those of other embodiments described herein. Many of the parts, and functions, are similar to that of corresponding parts of the seeker/receiver 100 (
A tilt mechanism 330 of the seeker/receiver 300 is a spherical gas bearing 332 for precision rotational positioning of an optics/receiver portion 332 of the seeker/receiver 300. The optics/receiver portion 332 includes a back bracket 336 having a spherical outer shape. Motors rotate the bracket 336, and thus the rest of the optics/receiver portion 332 as well, within a socket defined by adjoining structure 340 of a fuselage 342. Thus the tilt mechanism 330 is a ball-and-socket mechanism, a ball-and-socket gimbal that uses motors to position angle of the optics/receiver portion 332 relative to the fuselage 342.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain preferred embodiment or embodiments, it is obvious that equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described elements (components, assemblies, devices, compositions, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such elements are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any element which performs the specified function of the described element (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary embodiment or embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been described above with respect to only one or more of several illustrated embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other embodiments, as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.