The 'Advanced Space Vision System' (also known as the Space Vision System or by its acronym SVS) is a computer vision system designed primarily for
International Space Station (ISS) assembly. The system uses regular 2D cameras in the
Space Shuttle bay, on the
Canadarm, or on the ISS along with cooperative targets to calculate the 3D position of an object.
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Because of the small number of viewing ports on the station and on the shuttle most of the assembly and maintenance is done using cameras, which do not give
stereoscopic vision, and thus do not allow a proper evaluation of depth. In addition the difficult conditions created by the particular conditions of illumination and obscurity in space, make it much more difficult to distinguish objects, even when the assembly work can be viewed directly, without using a camera. For instance, the harsh glare of direct sunlight can blind human vision. Also, the contrasts between objects in black shadows and objects in the solar light are much greater than in Earth's atmosphere, even where no glare is involved.
The Advanced Space Vision System images objects with cooperative targets and uses the known positions of the targets to triangulate their exact relative positions in real time. The targets are composed of thin films of silicon dioxide layered with inconel to form an inconel interference stack. A stack like this has nearly no
reflectivity in the
Electromagnetic spectrum. The result is a black color that appears even blacker than the flattest black paint. In photos the disks look like small black dots, and a minimum of three are needed, so they are quite unobtrusive on most payloads.
The basic elements of the system were devised at the
National Research Council of Canada in the 1970s, to study car collisions. In
1990 development was transferred to
Neptec Design Group, a small commercial enterprise located in Kanata, a suburb of
Ottawa. The system runs on Neptec's
Advanced Vision Unit (AVU) processing platform which handles video routing, algorithm processing, video overlays, and the system interface. The operating system is the
Unix-like and
POSIX compliant
QNX Real-time operating system running the Photon windowing interface. The Photon implementation here was optimized to be the most worry free
direct manipulation interface possible for the particular needs and work habits of the astronauts.
The
Canadian Space Agency was involved at several stages in the development and deployment of the space vision system. Training for the system takes place in the simulators located at the agency's headquarters at the
John H. Chapman Space Centre near
Montreal.
The system was first tested in its early form on
STS-52 in October
1992, and used in subsequent missions. The advanced version was first tested on
STS-74 in November
1995. The system has been used with success on shuttle flights since then, and with equal success for the assembly and maintenance of the station since
1997.
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