DocumentCode
2992073
Title
Building an accurate range finder with off the shelf components
Author
Jezouin, Jean-Luc ; Saint-Marc, Philippe ; Medioni, Gérard
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
fYear
1988
fDate
5-9 Jun 1988
Firstpage
195
Lastpage
200
Abstract
The authors present an active triangulation range finding system composed of an independent laser system generating a plane of light projected on an object placed on a rotary table driven by a personal computer. This computer includes a video digitizer board connected to a camera looking at the scene. Besides its low cost, this system has other advantages over the comparable existing systems. First, the authors have designed a simple, fast and accurate calibration procedure which does not require any knowledge about the camera parameters or the relative position of the camera with the laser plane. Furthermore, this calibration procedure is performed only once, ensuring stable and accurate results. The result of the scanning of a given object is given in cylindrical coordinates. Choosing different viewpoints, Cartesian range images of the same object are computed in order to show, with shaded and perspective views of the scanned object, the quality of the results
Keywords
computer vision; distance measurement; microcomputer applications; calibration procedure; computer vision; distance measurement; laser system; personal computer; triangulation range finding system; video digitizer board; Calibration; Cameras; Computer vision; Costs; Intelligent robots; Intelligent systems; Laser theory; Layout; Microcomputers; Robot kinematics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 1988. Proceedings CVPR '88., Computer Society Conference on
Conference_Location
Ann Arbor, MI
ISSN
1063-6919
Print_ISBN
0-8186-0862-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CVPR.1988.196236
Filename
196236
Link To Document