1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to laser-guided projectiles and more particularly to an optically-coupled communication interface using SAL seeker.
2. Description of the Related Art
Laser guided ordinance is commonly used to engage point targets with a high probability of success and minimal collateral damage. Such ordinance includes guided artillery projectiles, guided missiles, and guided bombs, all of which will be referred to herein as “laser-guided projectiles”.
A laser-guided projectile includes a semi-active laser (SAL) seeker to detect pulsed IR laser electro-magnetic radiation (EMR) scattered from the intended target and to provide signals indicative of the target bearing such that the projectile can be guided to the target. The SAL includes a non-imaging optical system to capture and focus the scattered laser EMR onto a detector assembly. The optical system convert the target bearing to an irradiance distribution or “spot” positioned on the detector. As the target bearing changes the position of the spot on the detector changes.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Soldier A points the launch tube at the target to acquire the scatter laser radiation 24 from the target 20 and fires the projectile. Laser guided projectile 12 engage target 20 by detecting and following scattered laser radiation 24 from the target 20. The laser guided projectile 12 includes a projectile body, a warhead, control surfaces, and a guidance system. The guidance system includes a SAL seeker and a flight computer to control the flight of the laser guided projectile by manipulating one or more control surfaces based on at least one guidance signal from the SAL seeker. The control surfaces may be canards fins, wings, ailerons, elevators, spoilers, flaps, air brakes or other controllable devices capable of affecting the flight path of the laser guided projectile.
Laser designators and seekers use a pulse coding system to ensure that a specific seeker and designator combination work in harmony. Pulse coding is typically based on Pulse Repetition Frequency (PRF) coding. By setting the same code 26 in both the designator and the seeker, the seeker will track only the target designated by the designator. Current pulse codes use a truncated decimal system that uses the numerical digits 1 through 8, and the codes are directly correlated to a specifc PRF. Typical equipment uses either a three or four-digit code. The designator repeats the code in the emitted pulsed laser beam that is directed at the target to “paint” the target and reflected back to the seeker. The seeker may be configured to recognize multiple different codes. The seeker verifies the code embedded in the pulsed laser radiation. Details of PRF coding for laser-designated weapons are provided in U.S. Pat. No. 5,023,888 and 5,026,156, which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The following is a summary of the invention in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the invention. This summary is not intended to identify key or critical elements of the invention or to delineate the scope of the invention. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts of the invention in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description and the defining claims that are presented later.
The present invention provides a communication interface for a laser-guided projectile.
This is accomplished by using the SAL seeker on board the laser-guided projectile as a communication link. A communication device generates a pulsed optical beam that overlaps the detection band of the SAL seeker. The pulsed optical beam is encoded with data for the SAL seeker. Computer-readable program code is loaded into and executed by the seeker's signal processor to process the signals generated in response to the pulsed optical beam to extract the data for the SAL seeker. Data is typically coupled to the projectile pre-launch but may be coupled in flight to the target.
The communication interface may be retrofit to existing guided projectiles having SAL seekers, retrofit with a SAL seeker to unguided rockets to provide guidance and communication or integrated in a comprehensive design of a guided projectile. Use of the SAL seeker as a communication link allows either for the provision of SAL guidance to an unguided rocket that does not have other communication capability or for the elimination of other communication links in a guided-projectile design.
These and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments, taken together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
a and 4b are functional and program code diagrams of an embodiment of the signal processor;
a through 5c are diagrams of an embodiment in which a soldier uses a communication device to acquire and optically couple pre-launch data into a laser-guided projectile via the SAL seeker;
a and 6b illustrate free-space and launch-tube coupled embodiments of a communication device; and
a and 7b are diagrams of an embodiment in which a soldier uses a SAL designator to reflect a beam encoded with pre-launch data off a target to a laser-guided projectile's SAL seeker and to both paint the target and provide post-launch data to the SAL seeker.
The present invention provides a communication interface for a laser-guided projectile. This is accomplished by using the SAL seeker on board the laser-guided projectile as a communication link. A communication device generates a pulsed optical beam that overlaps the detection band of the SAL seeker. The pulsed optical beam is encoded with data for the SAL seeker. Computer-readable program code is loaded into and executed by the seeker's signal processor to process the signals generated in response to the pulsed optical beam to extract the data for the SAL seeker. Data is typically coupled to the projectile pre-launch but may be coupled in flight to the target.
The communication interface may be incorporated into guided projectiles having an existing SAL seeker to provide a communication link or an alternate communication, into unguided projectiles along with a SAL seeker retrofit to provide both communication and guidance or into a new guided projectile design. Unguided projectiles that are retrofit with a SAL seeker may have no means of communication. This approach provides a means for communicating pre-launch data using the retrofitted SAL seeker. This approach also facilities the design and manufacture of a smaller, lighter and less expensive guided-projectiles by eliminating the need for additional communication links. The SAL seeker multi-tasks as both the communication interface and guidance system.
Referring now to
SAL detector 54 may comprise four quadrants A, B, C, D. Other detector configurations may be used. Each quadrant produces a corresponding signal A, B, C, and D in response to the laser power in laser spot 52 incident upon each quadrant. Guidance signal ΔX indicates an imbalance between the laser power incident upon the left (quadrants A and B) and right (quadrants C and D) halves of the detector. Guidance signal ΔY indicates an imbalance between the laser power incident upon the top (quadrants A and C) and bottom (quadrants B and D) halves of the detector. SAL detector 54 suitably comprises an A/D converter that converts the analog signals to digital signals. The terms “left”, “right”, “top”, and “bottom” refer to the detector as shown in
The position of SAL seeker 46 may be fixed within a projectile such as the projectile 40. This may be referred to as “body fixed”. For example, the SAL seeker may be disposed within the projectile such that an optical axis of the SAL seeker is aligned with a longitudinal axis of the projectile. In this case, the laser spot may be centered on the detector when the longitudinal axis of the projectile is pointed directly at the designated target. The SAL seeker may be mounted on a gimbal within the projectile such that the optical axis of the SAL seeker may be rotated with respect to the longitudinal axis of the projectile. In this case, the laser spot may be centered on the detector when the optical axis of the SAL seeker is pointed directly at the designated target without the longitudinal axis of the projectile necessarily being pointed directly at the designated target.
In a pre-launch mode, a communication device 60 generates a PRF coded IR laser beam 62 that overlaps the detection band of the SAL detector. The communication device uses PRF coding to encode a device code 64 and pre-launch data 66 onto the beam. As shown the device code 64 is provided in the same field as the laser designator code for guiding the projectile to the target. Alternately, the device code 64 could be provided as part of the data. Beam 62 is positioned in the field-of-view of the seeker's optical system, which captures and directs EMR onto the SAL detector, which in turn generates one or more (e.g. four) signals. Signal processor 56 executes a portion of program code 58 that extracts the device code 64 and pre-launch data 66 from the PRF coded beam. Flight computer 48 verifies device code 64 and processes pre-launch data 66. Pre-launch data 66 may include fields for the guidance mode (ATA, ATG, GTG), fuze timing mode (airburst, point detonation, delayed detonation), fuze detonation mode (blast fragmentation, penetration), range to target, target location, lock mode (lock on before/after launch) or atmospheric conditions (temperature, wind, humidity). Beam 62 may be encoded with the actual data or with indices to data tables stored within the flight computer. Start and end bits may be inserted around the data to return the SAL to the normal PRF code mode. In pre-launch mode, the position of the laser spot and guidance signals have no meaning. The signal processor and flight computer may suspend processing of the guidance signals.
In a launch mode, a laser designator illuminates a target with a PRF coded IR laser beam. The laser-guided projectile 40 is pointed at the target to acquire the laser EMR scattered from the target and lock on before launch. Once locked, the projectile is fired. The scattered EMR in the seeker's field-of-view is captured and formed into a spot on the SAL detector, which in turn generates one or more (e.g. four) signals. Signal processor 56 executes a portion of program code 58 that extracts the designator code from the PRF coded beam and generates one or more guidance signals (ΔX, ΔY) indicative of the position of the laser spot on the SAL detector. Flight computer 48 verifies the designator code, calculates a bear to the target from the guidance signals and issues control signals to control aerodynamic control surfaces 44 to guide the projectile to the target.
Referring now to
a and 4b depict functional and program code blocks of an embodiment of signal processor 56. Signal processor 56 stores computer readable program code 58 in memory and executes the code to extract PRF coded information (device or designator codes and any pre-launch data) from the detected EMR and to generate the guidance signals (ΔX, ΔY). The logic circuitry and technique for decoding the PRF coded beam is suitably the technique described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,023,888 and 5,026,156.
Functionally program code 58 implements first and second difference circuits 80 and 82 that generate signal ΔX as an imbalance between the laser power incident upon the left (quadrants A and B) and right (quadrants C and D) halves of the detector and signal ΔY as an imbalance between the laser power incident upon the top (quadrants B and C) and bottom (quadrants A and D) halves of the detector. Program code 58 implements a summing circuit 84 that sums the signals generated by the A, B, C and D quadrants into a single PRF coded signal and a signal demodulator 86 that extracts the code (device or designator) and any additional data. In a retrofit, the existing SAL seeker may include SAL Seeker program code 88 that performs the conventional guidance functions of extracting the designator code and generating the ΔX, ΔY guidance signals. Data extraction program code 90 can be loaded into signal processor memory to upgrade the SAL seeker in order to provide the communication interface that extracts the data from the PRF coded beam and provides the data to the fight computer. In a new design, the extraction and guidance program code may be merged together.
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The communication device 102 may be aligned with and its beam 114 coupled to projectile 112 in a variety of ways. In
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Soldier B maintains paint on the target until projectile 142 strikes the target. Conventionally, the PRF coded beam 132 simply repeats the designator code 136. Alternately, post-launch data 144 may be encoded into the PRF coded beam 132 between instances of the designator code 136. Post-launch data may update target location, range to target, and detonation or fuze modes.
While several illustrative embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, numerous variations and alternate embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art. Such variations and alternate embodiments are contemplated, and can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This invention was made with United States Government support under Contract Number FA9453-06-D-0104 with the United States Air Force. The United States Government has certain rights in this invention.