dustrial
-range
nt. The
otimum
jramm.
mission
On-line
Arch.
A, Vol.
hkeits-
2 from
insing,
iultiple
Yology,
CRITERIONS OF SELECTING OPTO-ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS OF SYSTEMS INTENDED FOR CONTACTLESS
AND TRUE TO GEOMETRY MEASUREMENT
Dr. of Engineering Sience Ralf Goldschmidt
Bachelor of Physics Werner Borchardt
Certificated Engineer Uwe Richter
Rheinmetall Jenoptik Optical Met
FRG
Comission V
Head of Products/Clerk Section
Specialist
Project Manager Product Section
rology GmbH
ABSTRACT
People developing opto-electronic systems for contactless and true to geometry measurement not in any
case have the appropriate conditions of being sure, that they selected the most suitable opto-elctro-
nic components for their task from a great variety of components offered on the market. On the exam-
ple of CCDs and frame grabbers interesting measuring
problems - e.g. linearity errors of CCD measure-
ment of lateral pixel sensitivity and pixel geometry, investigation and verification of true to
geometry imaging features of frame grabbers as well
as quality investigations of video pick-up chan-
nels of frame grabbers - and measuring results gained on electronic components of different producers.
are presented and discussed.
Keywords: Accuracy, Camera, Photogrammetry, Sensor, Standards
INTRODUCTION
During the conceptional development phase of
opto-electronic instruments intended for
solving measuring, testing and automation
tasks an optimum selection of opto-electro-
nic components - for example CCD and frame
grabbers for such systems - is of decisive
importance.
They determine quality and use value . In
consideration of the variety of opto-elec-
tronic components with their partially most
different features offered on the market and
the entirely insufficient comparability of
the informative material about them for high
sophisticated image processing tasks it is
absolutely necessary to measure their para-
meters or to test them under future applica-
tion conditions (spectral range, dynamic
range, optical and electronic resolution).
2. LINEARTY ERROR
CCD components" linearity is investigated by
taking their characteristic curves (U = f(E:t), U
- video signal, E:t - irradiation) when they are
illuminated by a steady source. Irradiation can be
altered or by changing irradiance or by varying
integration time. For solving complicated measu-
ring tasks you have to find a quasi-linear range
in case of non-linear characteristic curves and to
define it for the dynamic range permitted later on
in the measuring system. If the dynamic range
limited in this way is insufficient correction
algorithms have to be applied based upon these
measuring results.
Within the scope of the development of non-
contact metric measuring and 2D-3D image
pick-up systems in the laboratory of Rhein-
metall Jenoptik Optical Metrology GmbH a lot
of different sensible opto-electronic units
were tested and certificated accordingly.
We would like to demonstrate here a selected
number of the most interesting measuring
problems
The measuring results gained on most dif-
ferent components of different producers un-
der equal conditions and measuring methods
illustrate the topical | importance and bri-
sance of an approach like that.
Thus a decision you have to take for a sys-
tem conception will be effective and pos-
sible at the earliest possible moment of the
development.
OF CCD COMPONENTS
he basic idea of the incerpretation method of
quasi-linear range determination consists in the
fact that a characteristic curve is approximately
linear when its rise change tends to zero. This
means that in case the characteristic curve is
indicated as an analytic expression (polynom) the
second derivation must disappear.
The principle of this method is shown on figure 1l.
Besides giving the quasi-linear range with the aid
of the second derivation the first one supplies an
additional information about differentiated sensi-
tivity in this range.