DEVICE AND METHOD FOR SHOT ANALYSIS
20210372738 · 2021-12-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
G06V20/41
PHYSICS
G01P13/00
PHYSICS
F41J5/08
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41G3/2688
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H04N23/90
ELECTRICITY
International classification
F41G3/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G01P13/00
PHYSICS
G01S17/86
PHYSICS
Abstract
A device and a method for shot analysis are provided. The device includes a data acquisition module configured to determine the time of departure of a projectile from a weapon and to acquire video and spatial data relating to a targeted target; a storage and calculation module configured to analyze the acquired temporal, video and spatial data; and a data transmission module configured to transmit the analyzed data.
Claims
1. A device for analyzing the impact of a shot from a weapon on a target, comprising: a data acquisition module configured to: acquire video and spatial data relating to a targeted target before the firing of a shot; determine the time of firing of a shot; and acquire data after the firing of a shot; a calculation and storage module configured to: analyze the resolution of a shot by processing data available at the time of firing of a shot; and temporally analyze a shot by processing data available after the firing of a shot and the data obtained by analyzing the resolution of the shot; and a data transmission module configured to transmit the analyzed data.
2. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the data acquisition module comprises at least one inertial unit configured to detect the movement of the breechblock of the weapon, of a rangefinder configured to acquire data on the distance from the targeted target, at least one camera configured to acquire line-of-sight images.
3. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the data acquisition module comprises two multispectral and multifield cameras.
4. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the data transmission module allows transmission via a wireless link.
5. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the calculation and storage module comprises at least a computer, a data storage capability, a learning database and a real-time clock.
6. A firearm comprising a device as claimed in claim 1.
7. A shooting simulator comprising a device as claimed in claim 1.
8. A method for analyzing the impact of a shot from a weapon on a target, comprising the following steps: acquiring video and spatial data relating to a targeted target before the firing of a shot; determining the time of firing of a shot; acquiring data after the firing of the shot; analyzing the resolution of the shot by processing data available at the time of firing of the shot; temporally analyzing the shot by processing data available after the firing of the shot and data obtained by analyzing the resolution of the shot; and transmitting the analyzed data.
9. The method as claimed in claim 8, further comprising a step of generating a shot resolution analysis report and a shot temporal analysis report.
10. The method as claimed in claim 9, further comprising a step of sending the analysis reports.
11. A computer program product, comprising non-transitory code instructions making it possible to perform some of the steps of the method as claimed in claim 8, when said program is run on a computer.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0057] Various aspects and advantages of the invention will appear in support of the description of one preferred, but non-limiting, implementation of the invention, with reference to the figures below in which:
[0058]
[0059]
[0060]
[0061]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0062] In general, to address the stated problem, the device (100) of the invention is shown in
[0066] More precisely, in one embodiment of the device of the invention with which to equip a weapon, the data acquisition module is composed of at least one rangefinder (102) configured to acquire data on the distance from a target (10), at least one camera (104, 106) configured to acquire line-of-sight images and at least one inertial unit (108) of three-axis IMU type configured to detect the movement of the breechblock of the weapon at the time of firing of a shot. However, the data acquisition module may be adapted according to the operational context, such as, for example, for short-range shots, it requires only one wide-field camera, and an IMU. In another embodiment, the module includes two cameras (104, 106) having different field widths, one wide-field and the other narrow-field.
[0067] The storage and calculation module (110) allows the analysis, processing and storage of data. In one embodiment, it is composed of a computer using resources of CPU type and of GPU type (dedicated to calculations performed by neural networks for example), of a learning database (208) comprising information relating to targets (people, vehicles, etc.) used for target detection calculations, and a data storage capability (210). The calculation module also comprises a real-time clock which ensures precise timing of the collected data without drift.
[0068] The data transmission module (112) allows communication to a remote device, preferably via a wireless link.
[0069]
[0070] The analysis method begins with the detection of the firing of a shot (202). The time of departure of a projectile is measured by the sensors of the inertial unit (108) which detect the movement of the breechblock of the weapon, i.e. the simultaneous vibrations on the three axes.
[0071] The detection of the time of departure of the shot triggers the recording (204) of the views by the one or more cameras (104, 106). The target (10) targeted by the barrel is digitally recorded electro-optically by means preferably of a plurality of cameras, which are both multispectral (visible/infrared) and multifield, and this is done for the entire time that the ammunition is in motion as well as after impact. In order to determine the line of sight, the device uses a real wide-field image and a real narrow-field image, the images being obtained during the aiming captured by the high-resolution multispectral camera system. Switching from wide field to narrow field is done automatically based on a distance criterion in order to ensure optimal resolution for the subsequent segmentation (214) of the image. Preferably, two cameras are used, each camera being calibrated independently to allow ballistics and parallax correction by the calculation module.
[0072] The digital video recording (204) taken by all of the sensors is stored and analyzed (206) directly by the computer (110) installed in the device. The computer that analyzes the images from the cameras is able to: [0073] calculate the impact position in the image; [0074] detect and recognize the elements hit in the image (people, animals, objects).
[0075] Those skilled in the art understand that the present invention may be implemented on the basis of hardware and software elements. The data processing may be performed by a computer program product comprising non-transitory code instructions.
[0076] A synchronization mechanism allows the data recorded by all of the components to be synchronized in order to ensure the coherence of the debriefing information.
[0077] The images are stored in the embedded memory (210). If broadcast mode is activated, these images are transmitted (212) to an external device (216) in real time for analysis and segmentation (214) in order to check the variation in the aiming before and after the shot.
[0078] The operation of the system may be divided into two main phases: a first phase of recording data shown in
[0079] The data recording phase consists of the following sequence of steps:
[0080] 301: Firing of the shot: the operator pulls the trigger of the weapon.
[0081] 302: Detection of the shot: [0082] the accelerometer (IMU) detects the movement of the breechblock; and [0083] the computer interprets the movement of the breechblock over a time window in order to deduce therefrom the firing of the shot by comparison with a pre-recorded shot signature.
[0084] 303: Recording of the data “A” available immediately after the shot: [0085] retrieving the image at the time of the shot from a circular buffer. This image is denoted image ‘C’ (for central); [0086] acquiring the distance from the target using the rangefinder; and generating a packet of data “A” sent to the computer for processing.
[0087] 304: Recording of the data “B” available ‘M’ seconds after firing: [0088] triggering a wait loop for M seconds. In one embodiment, the parameter ‘M’ may be set to M=1 second; [0089] at the end of the wait, retrieving the images corresponding to ‘N’ seconds before firing and to ‘M’ seconds after firing from the circular buffer. In one embodiment, the parameter ‘N’ may be set to N=2 seconds; and [0090] generating a packet of data “B” sent to the computer for processing.
[0091] 305: End of recording
[0092] The data processing phase illustrated in
[0093] The first sequence (400) of processing the data “A” allows analysis of the resolution of a shot, and comprises the following steps:
[0094] 401: Detection of the objects present in the image C via detection and recognition algorithms. This step allows the identification of static targets, humans, items of interior or street furniture, weapons, vehicles, etc.
[0095] 402: Ballistics calculation. This step allows the determination of the position hit by the ammunition in the image C, using the data from the rangefinder, the projection information from the one or more cameras and the ballistic profile of the weapon and its ammunition.
[0096] 403: Detection of the target object: if an object detected in the preceding step is present at the position hit by the ammunition in the image (calculated in step 6), the method moves on to the next step 404, otherwise the process of the first sequence stops and the ballistics information is passed on to the second sequence.
[0097] 404: Identification of the target (known person, target of a certain type, particular vehicle, etc.). In the case of an object comprising identified sub-parts, the method allows the identification of the sub-part hit. For example, for a human, an arm, a torso, a leg or a head.
[0098] 405: Marking and recording of the identification and ballistics data in the image C. Communication of this information for the second sequence.
[0099] 406: Establishment of a report intended for the target hit to notify them that they have been hit.
[0100] 408: Optional sending of the report via wireless link.
[0101] The second data processing sequence (410) allows temporal analysis of the shot, and comprises the following steps:
[0102] 411: Calculating the optical flux in order to deduce therefrom the deviation of the weapon in pixels, before and after the shot.
[0103] 412: Using the projection parameters of the camera to calculate the angular motion of the weapon (in degrees).
[0104] 413: Using the information on the distance from the target to calculate the linear motion of the aiming point in the reference frame of the target (in meters).
[0105] 414: Aggregation and marking of the shooting information in the image C: [0106] line-of-sight movement; [0107] target identification data (if available); [0108] point of impact calculated by ballistics;
[0109] 415: Generation of quality metric data for the shot fired: [0110] deviation of the weapon; [0111] shooting score if the target hit allows a score to be established; [0112] others, etc.
[0113] 416: Establishment of a digital shooting report: generation of a synthesis report (image, data file);
[0114] 418: Optionally sending, via wireless link (4G, 5G, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi) to a remote computer (tablet, smartphone, augmented reality headset) for viewing by an instructor; and
[0115] 420: Saving of the report on static memory, flash-type memory.
[0116] The present description illustrates one embodiment of the invention, but is not limiting. The example was chosen to allow a good understanding of the principles of the invention, and one specific application, but it is not exhaustive, and the description should allow a person skilled in the art to provide modifications and implementational variants while keeping the same principles. Thus, for example, it is conceivable to extend the functionalities of the system by adding, for example, a player positioning system in the case of a joint training exercise involving large movements.