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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A device for determining position and orientation of a receiving antenna
with respect to a transmitting antenna using a plurality of
electromagnetic fields, said device comprising:
transmitting means for transmitting a plurality of non-rotating
electromagnetic fields, each from a different location where said
transmitting means comprises more than one non-dipole antennae;
means for supplying a current to said transmitting means for creating said
transmitted electromagnetic fields;
receiving means disposed to receive said electromagnetic fields, wherein
said receiving means is disposed inside a volume of space where non-dipole
field conditions exist; and
processing means for measuring and converting output signals from said
receiving means into position and orientation measurements.
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein said locations are orthogonal.
3. The device according to claim 1, wherein said locations are
non-orthogonal.
4. The device according to claim 1, wherein said locations are co-planar.
5. The device according to claim 1, wherein said receiving means comprises
more than one non-parallel loop antennae.
6. The device according to claim 1, wherein said transmitting means
comprises a formed elongate electrical conductor patterned in a desired
shape defining an antenna axis and an effective radius, and said effective
radius is further defined by the mean distance from said antenna axis to a
border of said shape; and
said receiving means is spaced from said transmitting means by a distance
less than said effective radius, whereby said receiving means is located
in a volume of space where non-dipole field conditions exist.
7. The device according to claim 6, wherein said transmitting means
comprises three elongate electrical conductors, each of said elongate
electrical conductor defining an antenna axis and an effective radius,
where said receiving means is spaced from said transmitting means by a
distance less than the smaller of said effective radii.
8. The device according to claim 1, wherein said transmitting means
comprises means for sequentially activating said antennae.
9. The device according to claim 8, wherein said means for sequentially
activating said three transmitting antenna comprises one of a time
division multiplexed AC signal whose wavelength is substantially greater
than the distance between said transmitting means and said receiving
means, a phase division multiplexed signal, a frequency division
multiplexed signal, and a pulsed DC signal.
10. A device for determining position and orientation of a receiving
antenna with respect to a transmitting antenna using a plurality of
electromagnetic fields, said device comprising:
transmitting means comprising three transmitting antennae for transmitting
a plurality of electromagnetic fields, and said three transmitting
antennae being disposed such that said three transmitting antennae bound a
volume of space in which non-dipole electromagnetic fields exist;
receiving means disposed inside said volume of space to receive said
electromagnetic fields where each said transmitting antenna consists of a
formed elongate electrical conductor patterned in a desired shape bounding
a portion of said volume of space;
each of said transmitting antennae has an effective radius defined by the
mean distance from an axis of said transmitting antenna to its
corresponding border, and said receiving means being spaced from said
transmitting means by a distance less than the smaller of said effective
radii; and
processing means for measuring and converting output signal from said
receiving means into position and orientation measurements.
11. The device according to claim 10, wherein said transmitting means
comprises means for sequentially activating said antennae.
12. The device according to claim 11, wherein said means for sequentially
activating said three transmitting antenna comprises one of a time
division multiplexed AC signal whose wavelength is substantially greater
than the distance between said transmitting means and said receiving
means, a phase division multiplexed signal, a frequency division
multiplexed signal, and a pulsed DC signal.
13. A method for determining position and orientation of a receiving
antenna with respect to a non-rotating, non-dipole transmitting antenna
using a plurality of electromagnetic fields, said method comprising the
steps of:
transmitting said electromagnetic fields to receiving means;
positioning said receiving means inside a volume of space where non-dipole
field conditions exist;
processing and converting output signals, received from said receiving
means, into position and orientation measurements by:
a) defining a geometry of a transmitting antenna by measuring x, y, z
coordinates of ends of each of a plurality of discrete segments of said
transmitting antenna;
b) measuring more than one induction field components generated in said
receiving means by said transmitting antenna;
c) computing a magnitude of measured induction vectors of said measured
induction field components;
d) determining a plurality of angles between said measured induction
vectors by computing dot products of said measured induction vectors;
e) representing said computed magnitudes and said angles as a linear
extrapolation by using a first order Taylor expansion yielding six
equations with three unknowns (dX, dY, and dZ);
f) computing partial derivatives (dX, dY and dZ) defined by said six
equations;
g) determining change in position values (dX, dY and dZ) using an iterative
approximation; and
h) iterating said change in position values (dX, dY and dZ) until said
change in position values are sufficiently small to give an accurate
indication of the coordinates of said receiving means in the x, y, z
coordinate plane defined by said transmitting antenna.
14. The method according to claim 13, wherein the processing and converting
step further comprises computing said measured induction vectors, measured
by a zero orientation receiver in the x, y, z coordinate plane defined by
said transmitting antenna, at a currently computed position of said
receiving antenna, and determining said orientation by multiplying said
measured induction vectors measured by said receiving antenna by a matrix
inverse of said measured induction field components.
15. A device for determining position and orientation of a receiving
antenna with respect to a transmitting antenna using a plurality of
electromagnetic fields, said device comprising:
transmitting means comprising three transmitting antennae for transmitting
a plurality of said electromagnetic fields, and said transmitting antenna
being disposed such that said three transmitting antennae bound a volume
of space in which a plurality of non-dipole electromagnetic fields exist
wherein said three antennas are arranged non-orthogonally;
receiving means being disposed inside said volume of space to receive said
plurality of electromagnetic fields; and
processing means for measuring and converting output signals from said
receiving means into position and orientation measurements. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field Of The Invention
This invention pertains to devices using magnetic fields for measuring the
position and orientation of receiving antennae with respect to
transmitting antennae.
2. Description Of The Prior Art
The concept of using transmitting and receiving antennae with
electromagnetic coupling for measuring position and/or orientation is well
know for military target sighting applications. In this application a
gunner is seated in the cockpit of an aircraft and the receiving antennae
are located on his helmet. Transmitter antennae are located a few inches
away usually on the plastic canopy directly behind his head. As the gunner
sights a target through a sighting crosshair affixed to his helmet, the
receiving antennae pick up signals generated by the transmitting antennae.
These signals are processed by a computer to determine the location and
orientation of the helmet and then to point the armament in the same
direction as the helmet mounted sight.
Prior art magnetic field position and orientation measuring systems are
typified by the following referenced patents U.S. Pat. Nos: 3,868,565
(Kuipers), 4,054881 (Raab), 4,287,809 (Eglie et al), 4,849,692 and
4,945,305 (Blood). These systems utilize dipole transmitting antennae
which generate either AC or DC magnetic fields that are measured by
receiving antennae located on the user. The received signals are converted
into position and orientation using mathematics that describes the
transmitted dipole fields. These systems have the following
characteristics in common:
1. The equations used to determine position and orientation are based on
the signals being generated by dipole transmitting antennae.
2. The transmitter consists of two or three individual dipole antennae that
are collocated about a common center and whose axes are ideally orthogonal
to each other.
3. The characteristics of the transmitted field are such that the signal
strength falls off rapidly by one over the cube of the distance to the
receiver.
4. The receiver operates outside the transmitter coils at some distance, it
does not operate within or between the transmitter coils.
5. If there are electrically conductive metals (such as aluminum) near the
transmitter then the time varying components of the transmitted fields
will induce eddy currents in these metals which will in turn generate a
magnetic field which will distort the transmitted field. As the receiver
to transmitter separation increases the resultant errors in the computed
position and orientation of the receiver increases. This eddy current
generation is an acute problem for systems that utilize AC transmitted
signals while systems that use a pulsed DC transmitted signal are not as
sensitive.
6. If there are magnetically permeable metals (such as carbon steel) near
the transmitter then the magnetic flux generated by the transmitter will
be distorted by this permeable material. For a given steel structure
surrounding the transmitter and receiver, the resulting errors in position
and orientation will increase as the distance between the transmitter and
receiver increases. The magnitude of this permeable material error is
similar for both AC and DC systems.
For a transmitting loop antenna to generate true dipole fields at a given
location, the antenna must be either infinitesimally small or infinitely
far from the field measurement location. If true dipole field conditions
do not prevail then the computed position and orientation will be in
error. To make the fields more dipole like, Voisin in U.S. Pat. No.
5,172,056 utilizes a unique transmitter and receiver antenna coil winding
geometry while Jones in U.S. Pat. No. 4,737,794 discloses a mathematical
method to make the field from a circular loop transmitter look like a
dipole when the receiver is at distances greater than the radius of the
transmitter coils.
Large area antenna have been disclosed in a paper titled "Headsight
Television System Provides Remote Surveillance" by Charles P. Comeau and
James S. Bryan in Electronics, Nov. 10, 1961. This system requires six
antenna to generate a uniform field over the central part of a room where
it is desired to measure head orientation.
In a newer application of the technology in the field of computer animation
it is desired to animate computer generated images of cartoon characters,
robots, or animals. To accomplish this, one or more actors with several
receivers attached to their arms, legs, and torso perform the desired
sequence of movements in a room equipped with the transmitter. The
receiver's position and orientation measurements are captured by the
animation computer and used to make the computer generated image follow
the actors's motions.
FIG. 1 shows the use of prior art trackers in this application. Typically,
one or more actors 1 are located in a room with walls, floor, and ceiling
2. The room contains two or three transmitting dipole antenna 3 centered
about a common origin. The antenna is mounted on some type of support
structure 4 in the area where the actor will be moving. On the actor are
one or more receiving antenna 5 used to measure his body motion. The
transmitter and receiver antennae are connected to an electronics box 6
via wire cables 7 where the signals are transformed into receiver position
and orientation for use by the computer animation system.
These prior art systems suffer from the following problems:
1. The strength of the transmitted dipole field drops off as 1/R.sup.3,
where R represents the distance from the transmitter to the receiver.
Because of this rapid drop off in signal, the distance that the actor can
move about the transmitter antennae is limited. To overcome this
limitation several transmitters must be used to provide the desired
coverage or a lot of power must be used to overcome the 1/R.sup.3 drop in
signal.
2. As the actor moves farther from the transmitter, the position and
orientation measurements exhibit increased errors due to the conductive
and permeable metals used in the construction of the building thereby
limiting the area over which the actors can move.
An object of this invention is to provide for the first time an
electromagnetic position and orientation measuring system that can provide
a large operational volume without the need for multiple transmitters or a
high power transmitter.
It is also an object of this invention to provide a measurement system that
can provide a large operational volume inside a metal building with
smaller measurement errors than prior art systems resulting from the
interaction of the metal with the signal.
It is further an object of this invention to provide a transmitting antenna
configuration and signal processing method that can be adapted to many
different antenna mounting environments by eliminating the prior art
requirements of concentric, near-orthogonal, and dipole like transmitting
antenna.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The device of the present invention is comprised of an electromagnetic
transmitting antennae driven by either DC or AC signals, receiving
antennae sensitive to the format of the transmitted signal, and processing
means to determine position and orientation from the resultant non-dipole
fields. The transmitting antennae is composed of two or three coils
forming an antennae structure whose dimensions are large compared to the
separation distance between the transmitter and receivers.
It has been discovered that if receiver antennae are used inside a volume
of space where non-dipole field conditions exist instead of outside that
space, as is required by dipole transmitting antenna, then the signal
strength does not fall off rapidly with 1/R.sup.3, as does a dipole, but
falls off, as slowly as approximately 1/R, thereby greatly reducing the
power requirements to cover a given area. Further it has been noted that
measurements inside the antenna structure have smaller errors due to large
conductive and permeable metal than prior art dipole systems. This new
antennae structure consists of two or three loop antenna of any shape with
a size on the order of the area to be covered.
Prior art systems based on dipole transmitting antennae, as shown in FIG.
2, require the transmitter axes 10, 11, 12 to be centric to each other,
that is the antennae must share a common origin 13. The antenna
configuration of the present invention eliminates the concentric
requirement thereby facilitating very flexible configurations depending on
the measuring application.
Prior art antenna systems also require the transmitter antennae to be
orthogonal or near orthogonal to each other so that the resultant signals
can be corrected to appear to have come from orthogonal dipole antennae.
In the instant invention this requirement is eliminated, in fact they can
be at any angle to each other as shown in FIG. 4 or even parallel to each
other as shown in FIG. 5. In these figures each antenna axis is show as a
square or rectangle, in fact each antenna axis can have any shape, for
example, a triangle.
Comeau and Bryan's large area antennae disclosure describes a system that
requires six antenna to generate a uniform field over the central part of
a room where it is desired to measure head orientation. This differs from
the instant invention which uses only two or three antenna to measure not
only orientation but also position throughout the entire coil system, not
just in a central uniform field region. Since the cited prior art is using
the six coils as a large Helmholtz system, the coils must be centric and
orthogonal to each other to generate three orthogonal uniform fields over
the central part of the room. The instant invention has no such
restrictions and purposely generates non-uniform fields over the entire
working volume to enable position to be calculated which cannot be done in
the cited Helmholtz field system.
According to the present invention there is provided a device for
determining the position and orientation of receiving antenna with respect
to transmitting antenna using electromagnetic fields comprising
transmitting means for transmitting electromagnetic fields; and receiving
means for receiving said electromagnetic fields, wherein said receiving
means is disposed inside a volume of space where non-dipole field
conditions exist.
Also according to the present invention there is provided a method for
determining the position and orientation of receiving antenna with respect
to transmitting antenna using electromagnetic fields comprising the steps
of transmitting electromagnetic fields to a receiving means; and
positioning said receiving means inside a volume of space where non-dipole
field conditions exist.
Also according to the present invention there is provided a method for
determining the position and orientation of receiving antenna with respect
to transmitting antenna using electromagnetic fields comprising the steps
of transmitting electromagnetic fields to a receiving means; positioning
said receiving means inside a volume of space where non-dipole field
conditions exist, wherein computing the position of the receiving antenna
comprises the steps of initializing the geometry of the transmitting
antennae by defining the x, y, z coordinates of the ends of each antenna
segment; measuring the induction field components from the transmitting
antennae; computing the magnitudes of the measured induction vectors of
said induction field components and the angles between the measured
induction vectors given by the dot products of the vectors; representing
the magnitudes and angles as a linear extrapolation from a computed value
by using a first order Taylor expansion about the computed value;
computing the partial derivatives of the Taylor expansion, and solving for
dX, dY and dZ; and iterating the values of dX, dY and dZ until the values
are sufficiently small to give an accurate indication of the coordinates
of the receiver in the x, y, z coordinate plane defined by the
transmitting antennae.
A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to
the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 shows the arrangement of components of a prior art system used for
tracking movement of a person;
FIG. 2 shows a prior art transmitting antenna with three concentric and
orthogonal circular antenna loops;
FIG. 3 shows an arrangement of components using the instant invention for
tracking movement of a person;
FIG. 4 shows an arrangement of the three instant invention transmitter
antenna loops that are not concentric or orthogonal;
FIG. 5 shows an arrangement of the instant invention transmitter antenna
loops that are co-planar to each other and not concentric;
FIG. 6 shows a system block diagram of the instant invention; and
FIG. 7 shows the geometry used for computing the magnetic induction vector.
A DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The computer animation application using the new antenna concept is shown
in FIG. 3. Here the actor 1 is standing in a room with walls, floor and
ceiling 2. Attached to two of the walls and the floor or ceiling are three
non-dipole antenna 8. The antennae are scaled in size to cover the area
required for the actor's movements and are simply a single wire loop hung
from the surfaces. On the actor are one or more receivers 5 used to
measure the actor's body motion. The receivers 5 are spaced from the
antennae 8 by a distance less than the smaller of the effective radii of
the antennae. The effective radius is the radius defined by the mean
distance from the antenna axis to its border. Preferably, the receivers 5
are disposed inside a volume of space where non-dipole field conditions
exist. The transmitter and receiver signals are interconnected to an
electronics box 6 via wire cables 7 where the signals are transformed into
receiver position and orientation for use by the computer animation
system.
FIG. 6 depicts the major elements of the disclosed invention. Details of
the electrical design of these elements is not presented since they are
well known to those skilled in the art. The embodiment discussed uses a
transmitted signal consisting of a time division multiplexed AC carrier of
any convenient frequency as long as the wavelength is much greater than
the distance measured. Other transmitted signal formats such as frequency
or phase division multiplexing or even pulsed DC could also be used. In
operation the transmitter circuits 20 provide a desired AC current to each
transmitter antenna 8 here shown as 21, 22, 23 one at a time. The
transmitted signals are detected by the receiver antenna 24, 25, 26 where
the signals are resonated 27, 28, 29, multiplexed 30, rectified 31,
amplified 32, filtered 33, converted to digital format 34 and read into a
computer 35 for conversion to position and orientation. The amplitude of
the received signals being a measure of the receiver's position and
orientation.
The transmitter circuits 20 are designed as a resonant tank circuit to
efficiently deliver AC current to the transmitter antenna 21, 22, 23. For
this application in computer animation where the actor 1 will have many
receivers 5 on his body and one wants to quickly measure the outputs from
all receivers at the same time, it is desirable that the transmitter power
not be adjusted up or down as a given receiver moves farther away or
closer to a given antenna, hence this embodiment has a constant current
drive source. Switches 39 are activated by the computer 35 one at a time
to provide current to each antenna 21, 22, 23 one at a time.
The three transmitter antenna 21, 22, 23 each consist simply of a piece of
wire of the length required to encircle the volume of space where the
actor will be moving. The ends of each antenna being attached to the
corresponding transmitter circuits 20. For example, if the actor is in an
eight foot high room and he wants to move about an eight by eight foot
floor space using the antenna configuration depicted in FIG. 3 then each
of the three antenna loops would consist of a piece of, say, AWG#18 magnet
wire thirty two feet long. In this application the antenna loops would
simply be hung on the room walls or suspended from the ceiling. Precision
in maintaining the straightness or rectangular shape of the loops is not
required since the transmitted field measured at a given point in the room
is an integration of all the fields from the entire length of the coil.
The receiver antenna 24, 25, 26 consists of three non-parallel loop
antennae which have currents induced into their coils by the transmitted
field based on the principle of electromotive induction. In this example
embodiment each coil could have a diameter of 11 mm (0.4") and consist of
100 turns of AWG#36 magnetic wire.
The receiving coils are each tuned to resonance in tank circuits 27, 28, 29
to provide for efficient transfer of energy from the coils 24, 25, 26 to
the rest of the receiver circuit elements. The resonating circuits 27, 28,
29 could consist simply of a capacitor resonating with the coil and a
damping resistor.
The computer 35 controls a 3 to 1 multiplexer 30 which selects the signals
from one receiver antenna at a time to be rectified by rectifier 31 which
converts the AC signal measured by the receiver into a bipolar DC signal.
In this case the rectifier uses the transmitter's frequency reference 40
as a control signal to ensure that phase reversals in the received signal
are preserved. The rectified signal is then amplified by amplifier 32 to
maintain the receiver signal within a usable range of, say, .+-.5 volts.
The amount of amplification is selected by the computer 35.
The amplified and rectified signal is then passed through a low pass filter
33 resulting in a DC value representative of the amplitude of the voltage
induced in the receiver coil.
This signal is then converted to digital format by the analog to digital
converter 34 and read into the computer 35 for conversion to position and
orientation using the following algorithm.
ALGORITHM TO CONVERT NON-DIPOLE SIGNALS INTO POSITION AND ORIENTATION.
Receiver position is determined by using an iterative linear approximation
algorithm that utilizes the measured magnetic induction vectors. Receiver
orientation is then determined using an exact non-iterative algorithm
which utilizes the measured induction vectors and the computed induction
vectors. An algorithm that iteratively determines both position and
orientation could have also been used but is not the preferred embodiment
because there are fewer numerical problems associated with having to
determine only three unknowns instead of six unknowns iteratively. To
measure both three-dimensional position and orientation the number of
receiving antenna i times the number of transmitting antenna j must equal
at least six with the requirement that i and j must be at least two.
POSITION DETERMINATION
To determine the three unknown receiver position coordinates x, y, z one
must measure at least three characteristics of the transmitted field and
know the mathematical relationship between these characteristics and the
receiver's position. The field characteristics could be the magnitudes of
the measured induction vectors or a measure of the angles between the
measured vectors such as the dot products or a combination of at least
three of the above. Using any three of the items results in a system of
three non-linear equations with three unknowns. In the preferred
embodiment, six measurements (three magnitudes and three dot products) are
combined in a least squares manner to utilize the redundant measurements
to solve for the three position unknowns. The magnitudes of the vectors
are used because they are independent of receiver orientation. The angles
between the vectors are used to differentiate between other locations in
the fields that may have the same vector magnitudes to ensure that no
position ambiguities result.
Because the preferred embodiment uses transmitting antenna of any shape,
location and orientation with respect to each another and because the
receiver is operating very close to the transmitting antenna, in fact, it
may be completely enclosed by multiple transmitter antenna, one must
account for the geometry of the transmitting antenna when establishing the
mathematical relationship between the measured induction vectors and the
receiver's position. This relationship can be established by applying
Ampere's law to the transmitting antenna to determine the induction field
at any receiver position. FIG. 7 shows a single transmitting antenna 50 of
arbitrary shape, location and orientation with respect to the receiver's
position 52. The antenna 50 is represented by an N sided polygon where N=4
in this illustrative example. The induction field B at any location 52
resulting from antenna segment 51 is by Ampere's law:
##EQU1##
Where I is the current flowing in the antenna in a counterclockwise
direction and d is the perpendicular distance from the antenna segment to
the user's location 52. d is determined from the following cross product:
d=.parallel.(X.sub.i -X.sub.1).times.e.sub.s .parallel.
Where the notation X.sub.i represents the x, y, z positional vector from
the origin to location i and e.sub.s represents a unit vector in the
direction of a given antenna segment and is given by:
##EQU2##
and where the cosines of the angles are given by the following dot
products:
##EQU3##
The direction of the induction vector B at the receiver's location follows
from the right hand screw rule. A unit vector in the direction of this
induction vector is given by the following cross product:
e.sub.B =(X.sub.2 -XX.sub.1).times.(X.sub.i -X.sub.1)
The total induction field B at location 52 is the vector sum of the B's
from each segment of all transmitter antenna.
The algorithm to compute the x, y, z coordinates of a given receiver
consists of the following steps:
Step 1. Initialization of the geometry of the transmitting antenna. The
geometry is described by the x, y, z coordinates of the ends of each
antenna segment.
Step 2. Measure the induction field components, B.sub.m from the three
transmitting antenna:
##EQU4##
Where the notation B.sub.ij means the induction vector component measured
by receiver antenna i that was generated by transmitter antenna j. If a
two antenna receiver were being used then the components B(i,3) would be
computed from the cross product of B.sub.1 and B.sub.2.
STEP 3. Compute the magnitudes of the measured induction vectors MBi.sub.m
and a measure of the angles between the measured vectors, the dot
products, Di.sub.m using:
MB1.sub.m =.parallel.B1.parallel.
MB2.sub.m =.parallel.B2.parallel. [3]
MB3.sub.m =.parallel.B3.parallel.
D1.sub.m =B1.multidot.B2
D2.sub.m =B1.multidot.B3 [4]
D3.sub.m =B2.multidot.B2
STEP 4. Represent the measured field values as a linear extrapolation from
a computed value by using a first order Taylor expansion about the
computed value, yielding six equations in three unknowns dX, dY, dZ
defined by:
##EQU5##
Where the computed values (c subscript) are determined by applying the
currently computed receiver coordinates to equation 1 to determine a
computed induction vector and then determining the computed magnitudes and
computed dot products from equations 3 and 4.
STEP 5. Compute the partial derivatives defined above, either analytically
or by the simpler method of taking a small step in each of the x, y and z
directions and finding the change in the function due to this step. For
example:
##EQU6##
STEP 6. Solve for dX, dY, dZ in the equations defined in STEP 4 using any
of the standard numerical methods used for solving an over determined set
of linear equations.
STEP 7. Update the estimated location of the receiver using:
X.sub.i+1 =X.sub.i +dX
STEP 8. If the dX, dY, dZ values are large, continue to iterate.
The algorithm to compute the orientation of the receiver consists of the
following steps:
STEP 1. Compute the induction vectors measured by a zero orientation
receiver in the x, y, z coordinate frame of the transmitter using equation
1 at the currently computed position of the receiver. Arrange these values
into a matrix B.sub.t :
##EQU7##
STEP 2. The relationship between the induction values measured by a
receiver at some orientation and the induction values measured in the
frame of the transmitter is:
B.sub.m =A * B.sub.t
Where all items represent 3.times.3 matrices The matrix (A) is the standard
directional cosine matrix representation of orientation.
Using the expression above, orientation is then computed from:
A=B.sub.m *B.sub.t.sup.-1
* * * * *
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