DocumentCode :
2941907
Title :
Vision systems for quality control
Author :
Gallagher, Paul K. ; Lake, Don ; Schroeder, H.E.
Author_Institution :
EG&G Reticon, Sunnyvale, CA, USA
fYear :
1994
fDate :
27-29 Sep 1994
Firstpage :
217
Lastpage :
221
Abstract :
To successfully implement a vision system into industrial quality control, several resolution aspects must be met. First is temporal resolution, being able to capture the image in a way which isolates features in time. The rate of image capture in a vision system can not be a bottleneck to upstream production processes. Another is spatial resolution, the vision system must be able to see the minimum detectable feature on every sample imaged. The third is gray scale resolution, the number of steps between the system noise floor, and maximum light the system can absorb. The fourth is spectral resolution, or color. The way to meet these criteria does not typically require a significant amount of technical sophistication. This paper discuss some of the more significant criteria needed to be resolved in order to meet the temporal and spatial resolution aspects in a vision system, and the cost tradeoffs involved in meeting the requirements
Keywords :
image sensors; production; quality control; color; gray scale resolution; image capture rate; industrial QC; minimum detectable feature; quality control; spatial resolution; spectral resolution; temporal resolution; vision system; Colored noise; Computer vision; Costs; Electrical equipment industry; Image resolution; Industrial control; Machine vision; Production systems; Quality control; Spatial resolution;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
WESCON/94. Idea/Microelectronics. Conference Record
Conference_Location :
Anaheim , CA
ISSN :
1095-791X
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9992-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/WESCON.1994.403601
Filename :
403601
Link To Document :
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