DocumentCode :
935985
Title :
Optar, a Method of Optical Automatic Ranging, as Applied to a Guidance Device for the Blind
Author :
Kallmann, Heinz E.
Author_Institution :
Consulting Engineer, New York, N.Y.
Volume :
42
Issue :
9
fYear :
1954
Firstpage :
1438
Lastpage :
1446
Abstract :
Optical automatic devices, using ambient light only, can locate and range objects up to about 100 feet. Shallow real images of the objects are formed by a wide-aperture lens in an image space where a moving vane with minute bars and slots periodically cuts across all light rays in one image plane after another. Whenever the bars coincide with a sharp image they modulate the light received by a photocell. Range information may be read on a meter or control directly a range-following servo mechanism. A small hand-held guidance device for the blind is described. It is used for probing like a flashlight but operates on ambient light when that exceeds one foot-candle. Image space is explored several times per second by a helical vane with bars spaced the closer the nearer the objects whose image they intercept. A photo-multiplier and audio amplifier feed the resulting whistle-modulation to an earphone, 8 frequencies corresponding to 8 ranges from 20 inches to 20 feet. A motor turns the vane, also a chopper to supply via transformer and twentyfold voltage multiplier 1000 volts dc to the electron multiplier; total consumption is 50 ma from one 1.5v cell. , pp. 102-105; April, 1950.
Keywords :
Bars; Blades; Feeds; Headphones; Lenses; Optical amplifiers; Optical devices; Optical modulation; Servomechanisms; Space exploration;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IRE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0096-8390
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JRPROC.1954.274579
Filename :
4051822
Link To Document :
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