Paper
19 July 1999 Field evaluations of dual-band fusion for color night vision
Mario Aguilar, David A. Fay, David B. Ireland, Joseph P. Racamato, W. D. Ross, Allen M. Waxman
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
As part of an advanced night vision program sponsored by DARPA, a method for real-time color night vision based on the fusion of visible and infrared sensors has been developed and demonstrated. The work, based on principles of color vision in humans and primates, achieves an effective strategy for combining the complementary information present in the two sensors. Our sensor platform consists of a 640 X 480 low- light CCD camera developed at MIT Lincoln Laboratory and a 320 X 240 uncooled microbolometer thermal infrared camera from Lockheed Martin Infrared. Image capture, data processing, and display are implemented in real-time (30 fps) on commercial hardware. Recent results from field tests at Lincoln Laboratory and in collaboration with U.S. Army Special Forces at Fort Campbell will be presented. During the tests, we evaluated the performance of the system for ground surveillance and as a driving aid. Here, we report on the results using both a wide-field of view (42 deg.) and a narrow field of view (7 deg.) platforms.
© (1999) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mario Aguilar, David A. Fay, David B. Ireland, Joseph P. Racamato, W. D. Ross, and Allen M. Waxman "Field evaluations of dual-band fusion for color night vision", Proc. SPIE 3691, Enhanced and Synthetic Vision 1999, (19 July 1999); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.354418
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CITATIONS
Cited by 22 scholarly publications and 1 patent.
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KEYWORDS
Image fusion

Infrared imaging

Sensors

Image processing

Night vision

Thermography

Visible radiation

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