GB1570543A

GB1570543A – Laser radiation devices for aircraft
– Google Patents

GB1570543A – Laser radiation devices for aircraft
– Google Patents
Laser radiation devices for aircraft

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Publication number
GB1570543A

GB1570543A
GB39923/77A
GB3992377A
GB1570543A
GB 1570543 A
GB1570543 A
GB 1570543A
GB 39923/77 A
GB39923/77 A
GB 39923/77A
GB 3992377 A
GB3992377 A
GB 3992377A
GB 1570543 A
GB1570543 A
GB 1570543A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
sector
reflectors
aircraft
laser radiation
reflector
Prior art date
1976-10-04
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)

Expired

Application number
GB39923/77A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Saab AB

Original Assignee
Saab Scania AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1976-10-04
Filing date
1977-09-26
Publication date
1980-07-02

1977-09-26
Application filed by Saab Scania AB
filed
Critical
Saab Scania AB

1980-07-02
Publication of GB1570543A
publication
Critical
patent/GB1570543A/en

Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current

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Classifications

B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING

B64—AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS

B64D—EQUIPMENT FOR FITTING IN OR TO AIRCRAFT; FLIGHT SUITS; PARACHUTES; ARRANGEMENTS OR MOUNTING OF POWER PLANTS OR PROPULSION TRANSMISSIONS IN AIRCRAFT

B64D7/00—Arrangements of military equipment, e.g. armaments, armament accessories, or military shielding, in aircraft; Adaptations of armament mountings for aircraft

G—PHYSICS

G02—OPTICS

G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS

G02B5/00—Optical elements other than lenses

G02B5/12—Reflex reflectors

Description

PATENT SPECIFICATION
( 11) 1 570 543 Application No 39923/77 ( 22) Filed 26 Sept 1977 Convention Application No 7610948 ( 19) Filed 4 Oct 1976 in Sweden (SE)
Complete Specification published 2 July 1980
INT CL 3 F 41 J 9/08 Index at acceptance F 3 C TE ( 54) LASER RADIATION DEVICES FOR AIRCRAFT ( 71) We, SAAB-SCANIA AB a Swedish Company of S-581 88 Linkoping, Sweden, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:-
The present invention relates to laser radiation devices for aircraft of the kind comprising a plurality of retro-reflectors (or so called corner reflectors) each of which is so constructed that laser radiation incident thereon within a limited spherical incident sector having its apex in the corner reflector, is reflected back in the direction of incidence, the corner reflectors being so arranged relative to one another that they are together capable of reflecting back laser radiation incident on the unit within a total spherical sector that is wider than said limited spherical sector the reflector device being adapted to be attached externally to the aircraft Such reflector devices are used particularly on military target aircraft for simulated firing with laser radiation from anti-aircraft artillery or mobile weapon-carriers, the purpose of the arrangement being that at least one of said reflectors, when hit by the laser beam directed at the aircraft, shall reflect the beam back to the weapon from whence it came.
In order that such reflector devices, when carried by aircraft, shall be omnidirectional, i e be effective within a total spherical sector angle of nearly 3600, it has been suggested that all the corner, or retroreflectors of the device are mounted together in a manner such that the incident sectors of respective reflectors face outwardly from a common centre, whereby the device is given the form of a sphere having a supporting rod or the like extending radially therefrom Such a configuration must however unfavourably affect the flying characteristics of the aircraft on which it is installed It can be mentioned here by way of example that in the case of retro-reflectors having quite ordinary size, the diameter of the circumscribing sphere would be at least 200 mm and if such a reflector device is mounted externally on an aircraft, with the supporting rod e g extending forwardly on the aircraft structure, it would present a serious air resistance (drag) and further may impair the stability of the aircraft The installation of the suggested reflector device on an aircraft may also render it necessary to repeat the aircraft flight test programme.
An object of the present invention is to eliminate the aforementioned disadvantages, by providing a retroreflector arrangement which is’effective at every angle of incidence for reflecting back laser radiation directed thereon and which, when mounted on an aircraft, will not impair the aerodynamic stability of the aircraft to a greater extent than would the external loads which the aircraft is designed to carry, and will not present any greater air resistance than do said loads.
It is also an object of the invention to provide an arrangement of the retroreflectors which is well adapted for attachment to the wings of a target aircraft and which can be hit by a laser beam irrespective of its direction relative to the aircraft and without being influenced by the shadow of the wings in any flying position.
A further object of the invention is to provide an omni-directional laser radiation reflector device whose corner reflectors are not directly exposed to the wind and are protected against erosion by rain and hail.
According to the invention there is provided a laser radiation reflector unit of the kind referred to hereinbefore, characterised in that the corner reflectors are arranged in two mutually separate groups, one at each end of an aerodynamically slender body, which, when attached to an aircraft, extends substantially parallel to its longitudinal axis, and that at each end of said body the corner reflectors of the respective group are submerged beneath the ro ( 21) ( 31) ( 32) ( 33) ( 44) ( 51) ( 52) 1,570,543 outer surface of said body and are so arranged around the periphery of the end and axially therealong that the spherical incident sectors of the reflectors at each said end together form an entire spherical incident sector having a total angle of at least 1800, the symmetry axis of the last mentioned sector extending along the longitudinal axis of said body.
An exemplary embodiment of the invention will now be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:Figure 1 is a view of an aircraft, taken obliquely from beneath said aircraft, having mounted beneath each wing an omnidirectional laser radiation reflector device according to the invention.
Figure 2 is a side view of one of the reflector devices shown in Figure 1, taken on the line II-II through a wing of said aircraft immediately outboard of an attachment beam mounted on said wing, said beam carrying said reflector device.
Figure 3 is an “X-ray” diagram of one end of the reflector device and shows how the corner reflectors thereof are arranged relative to the main axes of the body and to each other, and Figure 4 is a front view of the reflector device.
In the drawings the reference 1 identifies an aircraft having wings 2 on the underside of which there are arranged six attachment beams from which external loads, such as armament, can be suspended The aircraft is here intended to be used as a target for simulated firing thereon with laser radiation and for this purpose an omnidirectional reflector device, or unit 4 is mounted on the centre attachment beam of each wing.
According to a characteristic feature of the invention the reflector unit has the form of an aerodynamically slender body which, as shown in the example, can be a cylindrical tube but which can also be given any other elongated form which is favourable for keeping the air resistance to a low level In the case of corner reflectors having the aforementioned ordinary size, the diameter of the rod will be less than 120 mm, which means that in the majority of cases they can be accommodated within the envelope of a conventional airborne missile or rocket.
The tube has a centre part 5 in which are arranged two load-carrying fittings 6, 7 which conform to the suspension means by which the aforementioned external loads are attached to the beams 3 The length of the said centre part is such as to be at least equal to the local wing chord 2 a, or, if the beam 3 extends beyond the wing chord as shown in Figures 1-2, at least as long as the wing chord and the combined length of the outwardly projecting beam portion.
Attached to said centre part are two end parts 8, of identical construction, said end parts being slightly rounded at their outer ends 9 The supporting structure of the center part and the end parts is of a 70 conventional type and is not therefore shown in detail in the drawing.
Each end part 8 carries a plurality of mutually identical retro-reflectors, or so called corner reflectors 10-16 Such 75 reflectors are well-known by persons skilled in the art and are either not shown or described in detail Principally they consist of a cup-shaped housing the exterior of which is cylindrical and open in one axial 80 direction and in the interior of which there is arranged reflecting means so arranged that a laser beam incident thereon within an effective spherical incident sector 17, the angle ac of which is of the order of 650 and 85 the apex of which is located in the reflector, is reflected back in the direction of incidence The central reflecting direction and direction of incidence of respective reflectors is indicated on the drawings by 90 the letters A-G In the example shown each end part 8 has a group of seven reflectors, a first one of which 16 being mounted at the outer end 9 so that these two incident sectors of the unit open forward 95 and backward, respectively, the said central direction G of said reflectors preferably being coincident with the longitudinal axis of the tube To prevent erosion of the reflecting means and to avoid turbulence 100 this corner reflector 16 is protected by means of a glass cover (not shown) The remaining six corner reflectors 10-15 are located at different points uniformly distributed axially as well as 105 circumferentially of the end part 8 At each such point the incident sector 17 faces radially outward, as seen in a cross-sectional plane through said point, and is further inclined towards the tube end 9, as seen in 110 the axial plane through the same point For mounting the reflectors there is at each such point a recess so made in the structure of the end part of the housing of the reflector can be completely submerged 115 beneath the cylindrical surface 18 of the end part wherewith the radially outermost portion of the rim of the reflector housing can be level with said cylindrical surface or located a short distance radially inward 120 therefrom In order to provide for full access of the laser radiation of the interior of the reflectors, including the portions thereof nearest the tube ends 9, each recess is combined with a cavity 19 which, as 125 shown in Figure 3, surrounds the rim of the reflector housing and extends substantially in the axial direction from the portion of the rim located deepest within the tube By so forming the wall defining said cavity that no 130 Instead, to arrange the retro-reflectors of an airborne reflector unit in two separate groups, one at each end of an elongated aerodynamically slender body is favourable not only for minimizing the air drag but also for the optical characteristics of the whole target system Since the two reflector groups can be located axially outside the supporting wing structure of an aircraft, in the example shown including the load carrying beams 3, neither the forward hemispherical incident sector nor the rear one will be limited by the structure at the leading and trailing edges of the wings This means that the reflector unit can operate together with anti-aircraft artillery also in inverted flying positions Since further the airborne reflecting system of this invention can be readily extended to comprise two units, one under each wing, one or more retro-reflectors which are able to reflect the radiation directed toward the aircraft from a certain laser emitter can constantly be present in all flying attitudes of the aircraft.

Claims (4)

WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-

1 A laser radiation reflector device for an aircraft of the kind comprising a plurality of corner reflectors each of which is so constructed that laser radiation incident thereon within a limited spherical sector having its apex in the corner reflector, is reflected back in the direction of incidence, the corner reflectors being so arranged relative to one another that they are together capable of reflecting back laser radiation incident on the unit within a total spherical sector that is wider than said limited spherical sector, the reflector unit is adapted to be attached externally to the aircraft, characterised in that the corner reflectors are arranged in two mutually separate groups, one at each end of an aerodynamically slender body which, when attached to an aircraft, extends substantially parallel to its longitudinal axis, and that at each end of said body the corner reflectors of the respective group are submerged beneath the outer surface of the body and are so arranged in the circumferential direction of the end and axially therealong that the spherical incident sectors of the corner reflector group at each said end together form an entire spherical incident sector having a total angle of incidence of at least 1800, the symmetry axis of the last mentioned sector extending along the longitudinal axis of said body.

2 A laser radiation reflector device according to Claim 1, characterised in that the corner reflectors of a group are uniformly distributed along the exterior surface of their said end portion and are mutually spaced around the circumference thereof by a constant angle (p), and in that portion thereof comes within the incident sector 17 of the reflector even a laser beam coming obliquely from the tube end 9 and being tangent to the sector along the side thereof nearest the tube end will in no way be hindered by the structure of the tube to be received and retro-reflected Preferably the edges between the cavities 19 and the cylindrical surface 18 are gently rounded to reduce the air resistance.
In compliance with the general requirement that the reflectors of each group shall be uniformly distributed within the total spherical sector for the group the six reflectors 10-15 of the exemplary embodiment have their centre lines A-F equally spaced in the circumferential direction by an angle /= 60 ‘ as shown in the front view in Figure 4 This means that with the above mentioned sector angle of 650 two adjacent, arbitrarily chosen sectors, e g.
the sectors for the reflectors 10 and 14 whose centre directions are A and E, respectively, will slightly overlap each other in the circumferential direction Also in the axial direction overlapping will occur between all these sectors and the sector for the axially directed reflector 16, since each of said six reflectors have their centre lines A-F inclined towards the end 9 at a constant angle y= 60 It is further evident that with this proportion between the angle y and the sector angle 650 each of the sectors 10-15 will have its vertical boundary line (the one of the two tangents which lies in a plane axially extending through the sector and which is most distant from the tube end 9) not quite perpendicular to the axis 20 but will be inclined slightly backward seen from the tube end.
Thus the reflectors of each group form together an undivided spherical incident sector whose centre angle is somewhat greater than 180 and which has its symmetry axis in the longitudinal direction of the tube and its geometric centre located within the end part 8 Assembling the unit 4 by putting the two identical end parts 8 and the centre part 5 together therefore brings about a fully spherical range of sensitivity, it being understood that the dead zone which theoretically exists along the part 5 and in directions perpendicular thereto, will appear only within a very limited distance from the aircraft because the incident spherical sector is slightly greater than 1800 for each reflector group and the two hemispherical ranges of sensitivity thus merge into one at a distance which is very short compared with ordinary firing ranges To further ensure that no dead zones will appear the two groups of reflectors are rotated through an angle =A or 30 , in the example shown, relative to one another.
1,570,543 1,570,543 each of these corner reflectors faces radially obliquely and towards the end of said body, the corner reflectors therewith forming a constant angle (y) also with the longitudinal axis of the body.

3 A laser radiation reflector device according to Claim 1, characterised in that the body is provided at its centre portion with suspension means for use in attaching said body to the conventional attachment means of the aircraft for external loads or armament.

4 A laser radiation reflector device according to Claim 3 adapted to be suspended from an attachment beam located on the wing of an aircraft, wherein the body is of such length that, when attached, all of its corner reflectors are located in front of or behind the local wing structure including said beam.
A laser radiation reflector device constructed, arranged and adapted to operate substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
SOMMERVILLE & RUSHTON, Chartered Patent Agents, 89, St Peters Street, St Albans, Herts, ALI 3 EN.
Printed for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, by the Courier Press, Leamington Spa, 1980 Published by The Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC 2 A IAY, from which copies may be obtained.

GB39923/77A
1976-10-04
1977-09-26
Laser radiation devices for aircraft

Expired

GB1570543A
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

SE7610948A

SE416233B
(en)

1976-10-04
1976-10-04

DEVICE OF A LASER LIGHT REFLECTOR UNIT WHICH IS PROVIDED TO INVESTIGATE INVESTIGATION FOR AN AIRCRAFT PREPARING CONSTRUCTION

Publications (1)

Publication Number
Publication Date

GB1570543A
true

GB1570543A
(en)

1980-07-02

Family
ID=20329028
Family Applications (1)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

GB39923/77A
Expired

GB1570543A
(en)

1976-10-04
1977-09-26
Laser radiation devices for aircraft

Country Status (8)

Country
Link

US
(1)

US4145111A
(en)

CH
(1)

CH620303A5
(en)

DE
(1)

DE2741898C3
(en)

DK
(1)

DK150029C
(en)

FR
(1)

FR2366587A1
(en)

GB
(1)

GB1570543A
(en)

IT
(1)

IT1090008B
(en)

SE
(1)

SE416233B
(en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB2138112A
(en)

*

1983-04-05
1984-10-17
Peter Gilbertson
Equipment for simulated shooting

GB2162930A
(en)

*

1984-08-10
1986-02-12
Laser Sporting Products Limite
Reflective device to be used on the target in a simulated shooting exercise

GB2171501A
(en)

*

1985-02-27
1986-08-28
Precitronic
Practising the aiming of a firearm

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

US4256366A
(en)

*

1979-04-09
1981-03-17
Buckelew Arthur L
Aircraft visual collision and avoidance device

US4299442A
(en)

*

1980-04-14
1981-11-10
Buckelew Arthur L
Aircraft visual collision and avoidance device

DE3015926A1
(en)

*

1980-04-25
1981-10-29
Elektro-Mechanischer Fluggerätebau GmbH, 2000 Hamburg
Towing target member – has sensor for radar and laser detection with internal and external reflectors formed as beam-gathering lenses

US4889409A
(en)

*

1988-02-16
1989-12-26
Ball Corporation
Hemispherical retroreflector

US4974934A
(en)

*

1989-11-29
1990-12-04
Hicks Paul E
Solar aircraft detector

US5228854A
(en)

*

1992-07-21
1993-07-20
Teledyne, Inc.
Combat training system and method

US5378155A
(en)

*

1992-07-21
1995-01-03
Teledyne, Inc.
Combat training system and method including jamming

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Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB191103214A
(en)

*

1911-02-08
1911-05-11
Norman Lea
Improvements in Reflecting Devices for Indicating the Position of Objects or for Signalling.

US2489337A
(en)

*

1945-08-10
1949-11-29
Us Sec War
Aerial reflecting signal target

US2813719A
(en)

*

1955-07-11
1957-11-19
Del Mar Engineering Lab Inc
Aircraft tow target installation

US3010104A
(en)

*

1958-10-14
1961-11-21
Del Mar Eng Lab
Radar reflective tow target

US3365790A
(en)

*

1963-06-18
1968-01-30
Joseph B. Brauer
Method of fabricating a radar reflector

US3268188A
(en)

*

1964-07-01
1966-08-23
Douglas Aircraft Co Inc
Store carrier with sway braced lug

US3468501A
(en)

*

1967-08-29
1969-09-23
Us Navy
Compatible missile/aircraft configuration

BE792708A
(en)

*

1971-12-27
1973-06-14
Comp Generale Electricite

RETROREFLECTOR

SE392644B
(en)

*

1973-11-19
1977-04-04
Saab Scania Ab

PROCEDURE AND DEVICE FOR CARRYING OUT A QUANTITATIVE SUMMARY CONTROL OF FIRE PREPARATIONS, TEMPLE FOLLOWING IN APPLICATION EXERCISES WITH SIMULATED FIRE DEPARTMENT AGAINST A FLYING FIRE TARGET AT AN AIRCRAFT STRAP

US3905680A
(en)

*

1973-12-28
1975-09-16
Beatrice Foods Co
360{20 {0 Reflex reflector

US3866226A
(en)

*

1974-02-25
1975-02-11
Northrop Corp
Radar-augmented sub-target

US3898747A
(en)

*

1974-06-24
1975-08-12
Us Navy
Laser system for weapon fire simulation

US3995376A
(en)

*

1975-04-03
1976-12-07
Cerberonics, Inc.
Small arms laser training device

1976

1976-10-04
SE
SE7610948A
patent/SE416233B/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1977

1977-09-16
CH
CH1137277A
patent/CH620303A5/de
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1977-09-17
DE
DE2741898A
patent/DE2741898C3/en
not_active
Expired

1977-09-22
US
US05/835,639
patent/US4145111A/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1977-09-26
IT
IT51148/77A
patent/IT1090008B/en
active

1977-09-26
GB
GB39923/77A
patent/GB1570543A/en
not_active
Expired

1977-09-30
FR
FR7729512A
patent/FR2366587A1/en
active
Granted

1977-10-03
DK
DK436177A
patent/DK150029C/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB2138112A
(en)

*

1983-04-05
1984-10-17
Peter Gilbertson
Equipment for simulated shooting

GB2162930A
(en)

*

1984-08-10
1986-02-12
Laser Sporting Products Limite
Reflective device to be used on the target in a simulated shooting exercise

GB2171501A
(en)

*

1985-02-27
1986-08-28
Precitronic
Practising the aiming of a firearm

GB2171501B
(en)

*

1985-02-27
1989-06-14
Precitronic
Apparatus for simulating the aiming of a weapon

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

DK150029C
(en)

1987-07-06

FR2366587B1
(en)

1980-06-20

DK436177A
(en)

1978-04-05

SE416233B
(en)

1980-12-08

US4145111A
(en)

1979-03-20

IT1090008B
(en)

1985-06-18

DE2741898B2
(en)

1980-04-24

DE2741898A1
(en)

1978-04-06

DK150029B
(en)

1986-11-17

DE2741898C3
(en)

1984-07-26

SE7610948L
(en)

1978-04-05

CH620303A5
(en)

1980-11-14

FR2366587A1
(en)

1978-04-28

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Legal Events

Date
Code
Title
Description

1980-09-17
PS
Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]

1994-05-25
PCNP
Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date:
19930926

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