Paper
26 June 1996 Emerging versatility of a scannerless range imager
John T. Sackos, Bart D. Bradley, Robert O. Nellums, Carl F. Diegert
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Sandia National Laboratories is nearing the completion of the initial development of a unique type of range imaging sensor. This innovative imaging optical radar is based on an active flood-light scene illuminator and an image intensified CCD camera receiver. It is an all solid-state device (no moving parts) and offers significant size, performance, reliability, simplicity, and affordability advantages over other types of 3D sensor technologies, including: scanned laser radar, stereo vision, and structured lighting. The sensor is based on low cost, commercially available hardware, and is very well suited for affordable application to a wide variety of military and commercial uses, including: munition guidance, target recognition, robotic vision, automated inspection, driver enhanced vision, collision avoidance, site security and monitoring, terrain mapping, and facility surveying. This paper reviews the sensor technology and its development for the advanced conventional munition guidance application, and discusses a few of the many other emerging applications for this new innovative sensor technology.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
John T. Sackos, Bart D. Bradley, Robert O. Nellums, and Carl F. Diegert "Emerging versatility of a scannerless range imager", Proc. SPIE 2748, Laser Radar Technology and Applications, (26 June 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.243570
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CITATIONS
Cited by 10 scholarly publications and 6 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Imaging systems

Cameras

LIDAR

Range imaging

Transmitters

Receivers

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