7
The video signals from each
of the two PMT's are processed
in the video correlator to produce
signals representing the following
five quantities:
(1) X parallax
(2) Y parallax
(3) X terrain slope error
(4) Y terrain slope error
(5) Degree of correlation
The X and Y parallax infor
mation is obtained from the two
video input signals by means of
an orthogonal cross-correlator.
After appropriate normalization,
the two inputs are first passed
through electrical networks which,
in effect, cause one signal to be
phase-shifted 90 degrees with re
spect to the other. The signals
are then multiplied together. The
result is an output which is zero
when the two images are aligned
as well as possible. For small
amounts of mis-alignment, the
output is proportional to the time displacement of the video inputs.
This signal is resolved into its X and Y components by multiplying,
in separate multipliers, by the instantaneous X and Y scan velocities.
The two-displacement components, after suitable filtering, thus
represent measures of X and Y parallax.
The X and Y terrain slope measurements are derived from the
variation of X parallax as measured over the scan pattern. Since the
scan pattern is already compensated for terrain slope, the resulting
outputs are proportional to the X and Y components of the error in the
pattern-compensation process. These signals are used by the computer
to further refine the slope compensation.
Figure 4 - AP-2 coorelator cabinet,
containing the scan generator and
video correlator