Engineering a Visual System for Seeing Through Fog 921130
We examine the requirements for on-board aircraft sensor systems that would allow pilots to “see through” poor weather, especially fog, and land and rollout aircraft under conditions that currently cause flight cancellations and airport closures. Three visual aspects of landing and rollout are distinguished: guidance, hazard detection and hazard recognition. The visual features which support the tasks are discussed. Three broad categories of sensor technology are examined: passive millimeter wave (PMMW), imaging radar, and passive infrared (IR). PMMW and imaging radar exhibit good weather penetration, but poor spatial and temporal resolution. Imaging radar exhibits good weather penetration, but typically relies on a flat-earth assumption which can lead to interpretive errors. PMMW systems have a narrow field of view. IR has poorer weather penetration but good spatial resolution. We recommend using both millimeter-wave and infrared sensor systems, blending the images using multiresolution digital-image pyramid-processing technology, and fusing the resulting real-time images with stored database imagery of the same scene.
Citation: Larimer, J., Pavel, M., Ahumada, A., and Sweet, B., "Engineering a Visual System for Seeing Through Fog," SAE Technical Paper 921130, 1992, https://doi.org/10.4271/921130. Download Citation
Author(s):
J. Larimer, M. Pavel, A. Ahumada, B. Sweet
Affiliated:
NASA Ames Research Center
Pages: 7
Event:
International Conference On Environmental Systems
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE 1992 Transactions: Journal of Aerospace-V101-1
Related Topics:
Imaging and visualization
Sensors and actuators
Radar
Weather and climate
Aircraft
Airports
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