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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4396945 |
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Method of sensing the position and orientation of elements in space |
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| Publication Date |
August 2, 1983 |
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| Filing Date |
August 19, 1981 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A method of sensing the position and orientation of elements in space,
comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of non-colinear light
sources on an element which is movable in space; providing a pair of
cameras at positions spaced from said element; recording with each of said
cameras the images of said light sources as to identity and location along
a specific line in space; calculating the intersection of said lines in
space to determine the portion of each light source in space; and
calculating from the calculated intersection and the known location of the
light sources on the element, the orientation and the position of the
element itself in space.
2. A method of sensing the positional orientation of elements in space,
comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of light sensors on an
element which is movable in space; providing a pair of light projectors at
positions spaced from said element; directing light beams from said
projectors at said light sensors; modulating the angular position of said
light beams over time; and correlating the time of illumination of each
sensor with the position of the projected beam at the time of such
illumination, so as to determine the angular position of each sensor with
respect to each of said projectors.
3. A method of sensing the positional orientation of elements in space,
comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of non-colinear
different-color light reflectors on an element which is movable in space;
directing light beams at said reflectors from a plane projector located at
a position spaced from said element; recording, with a color camera and at
another position remote from said element and from said projector, the
light reflected by each of said reflectors; identifying the recording of
light from each reflector by color; and determining the position in space
of each reflector as the intersection of the camera image position and the
light plane of the projector. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to systems by which the location and
orientation of an element in space (e.g. a robot arm or other platform)
can be accurately determined by electrooptical means. The invention has
applications either in open loop position locating systems or in closed
loop position control systems such as may be used for the accurate control
of robotic arms.
One of the more difficult current technological problems is to locate and
orient a robotic arm with an accuracy sufficient to perform the tasks
required. Such tasks might include the accurate drilling of holes,
matching of surfaces or insertion of parts in predetermined positions.
Many of these tasks require positioning accuracies greater than those
presently achievable by the open-loop servo-mechanism controls presently
employed. Most of the prior-art inaccuracies are traceable to the effects
of the gravitational force vector on the robot arm, which acts to offset
the arm position from that designated by the servo-mechanism controls.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore an object of the present invention to overcome the problems
which are experienced by the prior art.
A more particular problem is to provide an improved method of sensing the
position and orientation of an element (such as a robot arm) in space.
Still more particularly, it is an object of the invention to provide an
improved method which permits sensing of the true position of an element
in space, via an optical measuring system independent of gravitational
effects, and to use the thus obtained information in (known per se)
feedback control systems to effect positional changes that may be required
to bring the element to the desired position.
The position of a point is uniquely determined by the intersection of a
known line with a known plane which does not include the line. The
orientation of any three-dimensional body in space is uniquely determined
by the relative position of three known non-colinear points on that body.
Thus, if the absolute position in space of three such non-colinear points
affixed to a three-dimensional body (such as a robot arm) can be
determined, then both the position and orientation of that body in space
will also have been determined. According to the invention, the absolute
point positions are determined by sensing that each lies simultaneously on
a line and on a plane, the intersection of which is the point in question.
Both the lines and planes are implemented by either projected light
patterns or directions sensing capabilities of television cameras.
The invention will hereafter be described with reference to exemplary
embodiments which are illustrated in the appended drawings. However, it is
to be understood that this is by way of explanation only, and that no
limitation is intended to the specifics of these embodiments.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a geometric representation showing how a single point can be
located in space; FIG. 1A is a matrix illustration, showing the roles of
different components employable in the system of FIG. 1;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of a first embodiment of the
invention;
FIG. 3 is a view analogous to FIG. 2, but showing another embodiment;
FIG. 4 is another diagrammatic view, showing a further embodiment; and
FIG. 5 is a further diagrammatic view of yet another embodiment of the
invention.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIGS. 1 and 1A will serve to provide a simple geometric description for
locating a single point in space (the term "space" should be understood to
refer to terrestrial as well as extraterrestrial space).
The source of light required to make the system operative can be resident
either in the plane and/or line, or in the intersecting point itself. The
possible roles of these three components of the system are described by
the matrix in FIG. 1A. For the particular implementation where the point C
is the light source and both A and B are cameras, C is determined to lie
on the intersection of two lines in space (rather than a line and a
plane). This added dimension is redundant to the solution of the problem.
Extending the configuration of FIG. 1 to three points in space requires
only the means of handling multiple lines/planes emanating from the
camera/projectors and means of properly corresponding particular lines and
planes to particular points.
Descriptions of the implementations and operations of the various
configurations is included with reference to the embodiments in FIGS. 2-5.
FIG. 2 shows an embodiment in which the light sources are located on the
platform and cameras are located at positions off the platform. Three
non-colinear sources 10 are shown mounted to the platform 11. A point
light source is approximated for each source 10 by grinding a spherical
surface onto the end of a respective one of three thin fibre optic bundles
12. The latter serves to carry the light from the light generating source
13 which can be located conveniently elsewhere on the platform. The light
generating source 13 can be either a laser or a white light source. A
means of providing a unique identity for each of three light sources 10 is
implemented by the three light modulators 15 shown between the light
generating source 13 and the fibre optic bundles 12. Each of these
modulators 15 is driven by a unique code generated by the encoder or code
generator 16 which imparts an on-off modulation to each light source 10.
Two TV-type cameras 17 and 18 are located off-platform and are so situated
that the three light points from sources 10 on the platform 11 are visible
to both cameras 17, 18. The camera 17 to platform 11 to camera 18 angle
should be nominally 90.degree. and never less than 30.degree. or greater
than 150.degree.. Angles outside this range will cause severe geometric
distortion of precision. Each camera 17, 18 senses the images of three
light sources 10. The image position on the TV field uniquely determines
each source 10 to be along a specific line in space. The identity of the
particular source 10 is determined by sensing the identifying the coded
on-off light modulation associated with each source 10. The decoding
process is done in the video processor 19, 20 associated with each TV
camera 17, 18. The output of each video processor 19 or 20 is digital data
describing the identity of each light source 10 and its angular direction
with respect to the center of the TV field of view. These signals enter
the computer 21 (known per se) which performs all position calculations
and provides camera pointing control.
The pointing angle of each camera 17, 18 is servocontrolled to center the
TV field of view about the platform 11. Thus the TV optical magnification
can be maximized, consistent with keeping all three light sources 10
within the field of view. The high optical magnification optimizes the
angle determining precision of the system. The respective 2-axis TV
pointing servo 22, 23 is controlled from the computer 21 which has
calculated platform position within the field of view. The servos 22, 23
are thus controlled to keep the three sources 10 centered within the field
of view.
Data resident in the computer 21 on a real time basis includes the camera
pointing angles (field of view centers) and the angular positions of each
light source 10 with respect to these field of view centers. Thus each
light source 10 is determined to be on a unique line in space emanating
from each camera 17, 18. The computer 21 calculates the interaction of
these lines which determines the position of each light source 10 in
space. Knowing the fixed mechanical position of the light sources 10 with
respect to the platform 11 is then sufficient to enable the computer 21 to
calculate and output the platform position and orientation in space.
FIG. 3 shows an embodiment in which light sensors are located on the
platform and projectors at positions off the platform. The cameras of FIG.
2 are here replaced by light projectors 30, 31 and the light sources by
light sensors 32. These may be small "chips" which convert the projected
light from projectors 30, 31 impinging on them to electrical signals.
These are amplified and thresholded to provide digital signals to the
computer 21, indicative of the presence or absence of projected light on
the sensors 32. Thus, the computer 21 knows the instance in time when each
sensor 32 is illuminated.
The projectors 30, 31 generate light beams in space whose angular position
is appropriately modulated with time by commands from the computer 21. By
correlating the detected time of sensor illumination with the projected
beam position at that time, the computer 21 can thus determine the angular
position of each sensor 32 with respect to each projector 30, 31. The
angular position of the optical axis of each projector 30, 31 is
servo-controlled by commands from computer 21 to keep it centered on the
platform. This optimizes the resolution and accuracy of the projected
light patterns by minimizing the angular coverage required to illuminate
all three light sensors 32. From FIG. 1 it is clear that one of the
projectors 30, 31 need only project a plane in space while the other must
project a line. Both the plane and line must be scanned in time so that
each sensor 32 is illuminated somewhere during the scan.
Several alternative methods exist for implementing these projections. The
plane projector can be implemented by optically generating a light plane,
using cylindrical lenses 40 to collimate the rays from a light source. The
thickness of a plane would be commensurate with the required resolution
and the width sufficient to illuminate all sensors in one scan. As shown
in FIG. 4, a rotating mirror system 41 will provide scanning orthogonal to
the plane with the scan angle sufficient to illuminate all sensors. For
that projector from which a projected line is required, 2 orthogonal light
planes scanned as above can effect the same result. In this
implementation, first one plane would be turned on and scanned across the
field once. Then a second orthogonal plane would be turned on and scanned
once across the field orthogonal to the first. Alternating the scans
between the two planes produces two illumination pulses on each sensor 32.
These two time marks uniquely locate the sensor along a single line
emanating from the projector.
The scanning mechanism for all three light planes (two orthogonal planes
from one projector and a single plane from the other) can be run
continuously with the light planes sequentially turned on and off as
orchestrated by the computer 21. Thus the illumination pulses from each
sensor 32 can be attributed to a particular scanning plane. These nine
pulse arrival times when correlated with the scan position time all three
scanning planes and the servo-pointing data enable the computation of
position and orientation of the platform 11 in space.
Alternative methods of implementing the plane/line projection pattern
include a raster scan with a pencil light beam to implement a line
projection directly; (any of the methods common to projection TV systems
and the like are appropriate for this implementation); scanning of a plane
by using a sequence of coded multi-plane projections as known from the
prior art; obtaining fractional planes via the ratio of variable intensity
projected inverse light patterns or ratio of light patterns as known from
the prior art; and orthogonal coded patterns of the general type mentioned
in the preceding sentence effecting a line projection in a manner similar
to scanned orthogonal planes. In the use of coded patterns as described in
the two preceding sentences, the computer processing must include the
associated decoding logarithms to appropriately determine the specific
planes on which the sensor lies.
A final embodiment involves the use of reflectors on the platform 11 and of
one projector and one camera off the platform. Three non-colinear
reflectors 50 are shown mounted to the platform 11. These are physically
small diffuse reflectors colored so as to reflect one of the three prime
colors (i.e. one red, one green, and one blue). These reflectors are
illuminated by an off-platform plane projector 51, similar to the scanning
plane or a coded multi-plane projector implementation described with
respect to FIG. 3. In this case, the spectral characteristics of the
projected light must be nearly white to achieve proper reflection from the
three reflectors 50. Also mounted off platform is a color TV camera 52 to
individually sense the reflected images of the three reflectors 50 and
identify each reflector 50 by color.
Thus, each reflector 50 is identified and its position in space determined
as the intersection of a line (defined by the camera image position) and a
plane (defined by the plane projector). Both the projector 51 and camera
52 pointing positions 21 are servo-controlled (servos 22, 23) via the
computer 21 to track the platform 11 as in FIGS. 1 and 2.
Without further analysis, the foregoing will so fully reveal the gist of
the present invention that others can, by applying current knowledge,
readily adapt it for various applications without omitting features that,
from the standpoint of prior art, fairly constitute essential
characteristics of the generic or specific aspects of this invention, and
therefore, such adaptations should and are intended to be comprehended
within the meaning and range of equivalence of the following claims.
* * * * *
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Description  |
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