|
Claims  |
|
|
What is claimed is:
1. A platen for forming reseau marks on a photographic film in a mapping
camera or the like comprising, in combination, a substantially flat body
member having a front surface for underlying flush engagement with the
region of the film to be exposed by the optical image in the camera and a
rear surface, a plurality of apertures extending through said body member
arranged in a pattern corresponding to the pattern of the reseau marks to
be formed on the region of the film exposed by the optical image, said
apertures having ends opening into said body member front and rear
surfaces for the passage of light therethrough, common illuminating means
for said plurality of apertures disposed adjacent said body member rear
surface for simultaneously introducing light into all of the open ends of
said apertures, a projector disposed in each of said apertures for forming
the light from said common illuminating means into a light beam
representative of a selected reseau mark and for projecting said light
beam out of the other end of said aperture for forming an image of said
reseau mark in a pattern corresponding to the pattern of the apertures in
said body member.
2. A platen in accordance with claim 1 including means in said platen for
applying a vacuum between said body member front surface and the adjacent
surface of the film to urge the film into a flattened condition against
said body member front surface.
3. A platen in accordance with claim 2 wherein said vacuum means comprise a
plenum chamber in said body member, a primary channel extending around the
periphery of said body member for connecting said plenum to the front
surface of said body member, and an orthogonal network of secondary
channels having ends connected to said primary channel and extending
throughout said body member front surface, and means for connecting said
plenum to an associated vacuum source.
4. A platen in accordance with claim 1 wherein said common illuminating
means comprises an electroluminescent panel disposed in substantially
parallel, adjacent relationship with said body member rear surface for
simultaneously illuminating all of the open ends of said apertures in said
rear surface and means for connecting said electroluminescent panel to an
associated source of electric power.
5. A platen in accordance with claim 1 wherein said projector is arranged
to form a reseau mark image on the film having a configuration which
includes a central dot-like mark and a circular locating mark in
concentric relationship with said dot-like mark.
6. A platen in accordance with claim 5 wherein said dot-like mark is
approximately 75 .mu.m in diameter and wherein said circular mark is
approximately 500 .mu.m in diameter.
7. A platen in accordance with claim 1 wherein said projector includes a
body of transparent material of one-piece construction and masking means
for forming a masking surface of opaque material on selected portions of
said projector body to permit said projector to form said light from said,
illuminating means into a light beam corresponding to said reseau mark.
8. A platen in accordance with claim 7 wherein each of said apertures
includes a cylindrical portion opening into said body member rear surface,
a countersunk portion of reduced diameter opening into said cylindrical
portion, and a central passage extending between said countersunk portion
and said body member front surface.
9. A platen in accordance with claim 8 wherein said projector body includes
a cylindrical portion having an upper end arranged to be accommodated
within said aperture cylindrical portion with said upper end adjacent the
aperture open end in said body member rear surface, and a cylindrical
portion of reduced diameter arranged to be accommodated within said
countersunk portion and having a lower end engageable with the bottom wall
of said countersunk portion, and means for securing said projector body in
said aperture.
10. A platen in accordance with claim 9 wherein said masking means forms an
outer annular masking surface on said projector body upper end adjacent
the peripheral edge of said projector body, forms an inner annular masking
surface on said upper end that defines with said outer annular masking
surface an unmasked annular portion and a central unmasked circular area,
and forms an annular masking surface on said projector body lower end
extending from the peripheral edge of said cylindrical portion of reduced
diameter to a central circular unmasked portion in axial alignment with
the circular unmasked area on said projector upper end, whereby the light
introduced into said apertures passes through said annular unmasked
portion and said circular unmasked area on said projector upper end,
through said projector body and out of said circular unmasked portion at
the lower end of said projector in the form of circular locating marks and
dot-like marks, respectively, for imaging on the film disposed adjacent
said front surface, the circular locating marks being concentric with and
surrounding the dot-like marks.
11. A platen for forming reseau marks on a photographic film in a mapping
camera or the like comprising, in combination, a substantially flat body
member having a front surface and rear surface, said front surface being
arranged to position the film format in underlying engagement therewith
for exposure of the film to the light of the optical image formed by the
camera and directed towards the side of the film opposite said front
surface, illuminating means disposed adjacent the rear surface of said
body member for producing a source of light, means in said body member
simultaneously illuminated by said illuminating means for forming light
from said illuminating means into an optical pattern of reseau marks and
for projecting said pattern of reseau marks onto the side of the film
adjacent said front surface for exposure of the reseau marks on the film,
said pattern being superimposed with said optical image.
12. A platen in accordance with claim 11 including means defined in said
front surface of said body member for applying a vacuum between said body
member front surface and the adjacent surface of the film to urge the film
into a flattened condition against said body member front surface.
13. A platen in accordance with claim 12, wherein said vacuum means
comprise a plenum chamber in said body member, a primary channel extending
around the periphery of said body member for connecting said plenum to the
front surface of said body member, and an orthogonal network of secondary
channels having ends connected to said primary channel and extending
throughout said body member front surface, and means for connecting said
plenum to an associated vacuum source.
14. A platen in accordance with claim 11 wherein said means in said body
member includes a plurality of one-piece projectors positioned in
apertures formed in said body member. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to photogrammetric apparatus and, more particularly,
to a platen for forming reseau marks on film.
In the photographing of terrain or the like with a mapping camera or the
like, a common practice is to generate a set of discrete punctiform images
or reseau marks on the photographic format or film which are uniformly
distributed throughout the film while the optical image of a scene is
formed by the camera. Such reseau marks are used to facilitate
measurements through which appropriate corrections can be made to remove
the effects of film deformation and thereby improve accuracies of
aerotriangulation.
The typical camera which provides for the formation of such reseau marks
utilizes a glass reseau plate provided with reseau marks and which is
placed in front of the focal plane in the camera. However, the glass
reseau plate camera has never achieved widespread acceptance among
potential users because of its many limitations and drawbacks. For
instance, the glass reseau plate produces marks which are quite
conspicuous and distracting on the developed film inhibiting photo
interpretation. In addition, the glass reseau plate is subject to gradual
deterioration by scratching and abrasion, generates discharges of static
electricity, constitutes a compromising element of the optical system, and
is potentially subject to breaking or misalignment. Furthermore, such
glass reseau plates are generally part of the camera cone, limiting the
type of camera in which it may be utilized. Another specific drawback of
the glass reseau plate arises with film images which contain either
overexposed or underexposed areas. Since the glass reseau plate system is
a passive system depending on the illumination of the object photographed,
measurement difficulties arise when measurements are made through such
overexposed or underexposed areas, and, since the glass reseau plate
always appears in the focal plane, reseau marks are formed on the film
whether they are desired or not.
There has been in the past some limited utilization of a platen for forming
reseau marks on a photographic format, but such reseau platens have not
been commercially available, their main use being in a few very expensive
military mapping cameras. However, even such present-day reseau platens
have objectionable characteristics, one of which was a deformation of the
platen upon the application of the film-flattening vacuum. Vacuum-induced
deviations from flatness of as much as 30 .mu.m have been found to be
characteristic of platens in certain well-known commercial mapping
cameras. Such deformation can significantly compromise accuracies of
aerial triangulation and do damage to the integrity of the stereo model.
Basically, such vacuum-induced deformation is brought about with
present-day platens by the use of a vacuum plenum behind the film format.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, a primary object of this invention is providing a new and
novel platen for forming reseau marks on photographic film in a mapping
camera or the like.
Another object of this invention is to provide a new and novel platen for
forming reseau marks on photographic film which produces images of
constant, high density that are consistently measurable throughout the
film format even in both overexposed or underexposed film areas.
A further object of this invention is to provide a new and novel platen for
forming reseau marks on photographic film which is completely undeformable
upon the application of a film-flattening vacuum so as to produce a high
degree of accuracy in aerial triangulation, particularly in the stereo
model.
Still another object of this invention is to provide a new and novel platen
for forming reseau marks on a photographic film which produces much higher
accuracies of aerial triangulation and flatter models for compilation than
with present-day equipment.
Still a further object of this invention is to provide a new and novel
platen for forming reseau marks on a photographic film which is readily
adaptable to a wide variety of cameras, such as mapping cameras or the
like, which is extremely durable so as to operate under a wide variety of
conditions without breakage or misalignment and uses an active rather than
a passive system of illumination so as to permit selective use in a camera
only when required or desired.
This invention further contemplates provision of a new and novel platen for
forming reseau marks on a photographic film for a mapping camera or the
like which is simple and light weight in construction, which is
characterized by a high degree of reliability and stability, which is of
relatively low cost and presents a low profile, and which permits its
ready incorporation into standard commercial mapping cameras with a
minimum of time and expense.
The object of this invention and operative objects are accomplished by the
provision of a substantially flat platen body member having a front
surface for underlying flush engagement with the film to be exposed by an
optical image in the camera and a rear surface, a plurality of apertures
being provided in the body member extending between the front and rear
surfaces and arranged in a pattern corresponding to the pattern of the
reseau marks to be formed on the film and having front and rear surfaces
for the passage of light therethrough. Illuminating means are disposed
adjacent the body member rear surface for introducing light into the
adjacent open ends of the apertures, and a projector is disposed in each
of the apertures for forming a light beam from the light introduced into
the aperture open end representative of a selected reseau mark and for
projecting said light beam out of the other end of the apertures onto a
film for forming a image of the reseau marks in a pattern corresponding to
the pattern of the apertures in the body member, together with means in
the platen for forming a vacuum between the film and front surface of the
body member.
For a better understanding of the present invention, together with other
details and features thereof, reference is made to the following
description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the reseau platen of the invention;
FIG. 2 is a top plan view of the platen of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a rear plan view of the platen of FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a magnified view of the reseau mark produced with the platen of
FIG. 1;
FIG. 5 is a plan view of a film portion showing reseau marks of a
particular spacing produced with the platen of FIG. 1;
FIG. 6 is a view similar to FIG. 5 showing reseau marks produced in a
different spacing;
FIG. 7 is a sectional view taken substantially along lines 7--7 of FIG. 1
in the direction of the arrows;
FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a projector incorporated in the platen of
the invention;
FIG. 9 is a side elevation view of the projector of FIG. 8;
FIG. 10 is an end view of one end of the projector of FIG. 9; and
FIG. 11 is an end view of the other end of the projector of FIG. 9.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to the drawings and to FIG. 1 in particular, there is shown a
platen constructed in accordance with the invention and designated
generally by the letter P. The reseau platen P comprises a substantially
flat body member 11 having a front or top surface 12, as shown best in
FIG. 2, and a rear surface 13, as shown best in FIG. 3.
As is well known, the platen P is arranged to be mounted in photographic
apparatus, such as a mapping camera or the like, provided with film for
photographing terrain areas or the like, the film being suitably mounted
for intermittent advance to photograph terrain areas sequentially in the
well known manner. As shown in FIG. 7, the film F' having an inner surface
F' and outer surface F" containing the photographic emulsion is mounted in
a camera to be advanced along the top surface 12 of the platen P with the
surface 12 in underlying, flush engagement with the inner surface F of the
film and the outer surface F" of the film disposed in the focal plane of
the camera, arranged to be exposed to the optical image produced in the
camera.
As shown best in FIGS. 3 and 7, the platen body member 11 is provided with
a plurality of apertures 16 arranged in a pattern corresponding to the
pattern of the reseau marks to be formed on the film F. In the illustrated
embodiment, and as shown best in FIG. 3, the platen P is provided with 169
apertures 16 arranged in 13 rows of 13 apertures each which would form the
reseau marking pattern on the film F as shown in FIG. 6.
The apertures 16 extend through the body member 11 of the platen P and have
one end 17 opening into the platen surface 13 and the other end 18 opening
into the platen surface 12, as shown best in FIG. 7. Each of the apertures
16 includes a cylindrical portion 19, a countersunk cylindrical portion 21
of reduced diameter, and an axial passage or air gap 22 extending between
the bottom of the countersunk portion 21 and the platen surface 12 so that
light entering the aperture open end 17 passes through the aperture out of
the open end 18.
Each of the apertures 16 is arranged to accommodate a projector designated
generally by the numeral 24, as shown best in FIGS. 8-11. The projectors
24 are of a solid, one-piece construction formed of transparent material,
such as a suitable plastic material or the like, and include a cylindrical
section 26 having an upper end 27 and a section of reduced diameter 28
having a lower end 29. Thus, the projector 24 may be readily inserted
within an aperture 16, with the cylindrical section 26 fitted into the
cylindrical portion 19 of the aperture and the section of reduced diameter
28 suitably positioned within the countersunk portion 21 of reduced
diameter in the aperture. Preferably, the projector 24 is fixedly mounted
in the aperture 16 by suitable means, such as epoxy glue or the like.
The platen P also includes a light source disposed adjacent the rear
surface 13 of body member 11 for introducing light into the adjacent open
ends 17 of the apertures 16. Most specifically, as shown best in FIG. 7,
the light source preferably comprises an electroluminescent panel 31 of
conventional construction which when energized produces a continuous sheet
of light extending in the direction of the arrows I throughout the rear
surface 13 of the platen body member 11.
The panel 31 is arranged to be energized by an associated source of
electric power through conductors 32 and preferably controlled by an
external control unit (not shown) associated with platen P, the control
unit being interposed between an intervalometer and the camera. Such a
control unit, upon receiving the "shutter open" command from the
intervalometer, activates the electroluminescent panel 31 for illumination
of the projectors 24 and then, after a slight delay, relays the command to
the camera.
In the illustrated embodiment, the reseau marks preferably formed with the
platen P are shown in FIG. 4, and each mark comprises a small dense,
dot-like mark 33 preferably approximately 75 .mu.m in diameter surrounded
by a circular mark 34 in concentric relationship therewith and preferably
approximately 500 .mu.m in diameter. In order for the projector 24 to form
the light from the panel 31 into a light beam from which images of the
reseau mark of FIG. 4 are formed on the film F, suitable masking surfaces
are provided on the projector 24 as shown in FIGS. 8-11. Most
specifically, as shown best in FIG. 8, the masking surfaces include an
outer annular surface 36 of opaque material adjacent the peripheral edge
on the end 27 of projector 24 and an inner annular surface 37 of opaque
material also on the projector end 27, defining with the outer annular
surface 36 an unmasked annular area 38. The annular surface 37 also
defines a central unmasked circular area 39 on the projector end 27. The
other end 29 of projector 24 also includes a masking surface 41 of opaque
material which defines a central unmasked circular area 42 in axial
alignment with the unmasked circular area 39 on the projector end 27.
Thus, the light from the panel 31 entering the open ends 17 of apertures 16
is permitted to pass only through the unmasked areas 38 and 39 in the
projector end 27 as indicated by light rays 43 and 44, respectively. These
rays 43 and 44 subsequently emerge from the unmasked circular area 42 at
the other end 29 of the projector to be directed through the passage 22 of
the apertures 16 onto the film F to expose the reseau marks shown in FIG.
4. As can be seen, light ray 43 produces the circular mark 34, and light
ray 44 produces the dot-like mark 33. As the film F is of transparent
material with the emulsion formed on the film surface F", exposure of the
emulsion to the optical image of the scene occurs from light striking the
film in the direction of the arrow T, with the imaging of the reseau marks
on the film from light directed onto the film from the opposite side or in
the direction of the arrows I.
The platen of the invention also includes vacuum means for producing a
vacuum between the film surface F' and the platen body member surface 12.
More specifically, as shown in FIGS. 1-3, the platen P is arranged to be
connected to an associated source of vacuum by means such as a conduit 46
connected to a small plenum 47 as shown in FIG. 3 located behind the area
of data windows (not shown). As shown in FIG. 2, a primary peripheral
channel 48 connected to the plenum 47 extends throughout the periphery of
the platen body member 11 and is fed by an orthogonal net of very fine
secondary channels 49 which cover the interior F' of the film F.
Thus, the backside of the platen is not subject to a vacuum, and
atmospheric pressure remains the same on both sides with the result that
the surface of the platen stays perfectly stable when the vacuum is
applied and does not acquire an increasingly concave set with extended
use. It should be understood that, in the embodiment illustrated in FIG.
3, 169 apertures 16 are provided in the platen body member 11, each of
which apertures is provided with a small axial passage 22. However, the
number of reseau projectors used and apertures opened to accommodate such
a selected number of projectors may be varied by omitting the drilling of
the small passages 22 in those apertures 16 which are not to be furnished
with projectors. Thus, by way of example, although 169 apertures may
always be provided in the platen P, passages 22 are opened by drilling or
the like only in those apertures 16 which are to be used by the
accommodation of projectors 24 therein. For instance, only 25 passages 22
may be opened to provide a platen for producing the reseau mark pattern of
FIG. 5. Other embodiments may produce reseau mark patterns of 49 and 85
reseau marks on the film format.
Furthermore, it should be understood that the electroluminescent panel 31
is combined with a plate member 51 for the vacuum means incorporated in
the platen P to form a cap assembly designated generally in FIG. 1 by the
numeral 52. The cap assembly 52 has been removed in FIG. 3 to show the
configuration of the surface 13 of the platen body member 11.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|