a reply to:
StargateSG7
Here is the direct 1920 by 1080 pixel link to the proposed user interface
for the Heavy Lift Vehicle flight control and monitoring system.
This JPEG drawing version was originally done for a MARINE
environment but is easily adaptable to an aerospace environment.
See full size 1920x1080 bitmap:
files.abovetopsecret.com...
The system is full 4k (4096 by 2160p) resolution using 32-bit RGBA pixels
at up to 10,000 FPS CAPTURE AND PLAYBACK. The inherent data rate
for those of you who are curious is:
Data Rate = 10,000 FPS x (4096 x 2160 ) x 4 bytes = 353,894,400,000 Bytes per Second
or 353 GIGABYTES PER SECOND PER CAMERA !!!!!!
Of course, we are using Fibre Optic throughout all connections
from custom 10,000 fps 4k camera to custom distributed FPGA
video processing circuits which work at 512 pixel by 512 pixel
chunks at a time in order to get that 10,000 FPS frame rate
and HUGE Petabyte arrays of Flash RAM disks!
...BUT....since Flash RAM disks at that 10,000 FPS speed
would be an ABSOLUTELY RIDICULOUSLY HIGH COST we will
be using a ground-based 4-terabyte hard disks in a parallel array
....AND...we will be recording "only" at 1000 FPS at 1920 by 1080
using RGBA-32 pixels rather than the full 4K capability
of the system.
For ground monitoring we use a live 100 megabits/sec per camera
(800 megabits per second for 8 camera feed) interframe-based live
video stream at 60 fps but recorded to local storage at 1000 FPS
for later space-to-earth download. We can get BOTH 1080p and
4K monitors at 240 HZ with custom fibre interconnects because
the switching speeds of the pixels only goto a maximum of 240 HZ.
HDMI and DisplayPort interconnects can only go a maximum of
60 frames per second so our monitors are modified to handle
fibre connections and the full 240 HZ at 2K/4K throughput.
If we used an ultra-fast RGBA Laser Projector ONLY THEN we could
display the FULL 2K or 4K 10,000 FPS frame rate from the cameras.
Expensive? Heck Yeah! It's a SEVEN DISPLAY
MONITORING SYSTEM which is shown below
in a real-world configuration.
JUST the 4K monitoring system below is $75,000
See Link to 7-screen 4K display station:
files.abovetopsecret.com...
If we go the full EIGHT-CAMERAS 360 degree surround view system
at 1000 FPS (8 Phantom HD Gold or Miro Cameras at 1000 FPS)
See link:
This one is GOOD!
Phantom Miro 320S/321S Cameras
www.highspeedcameras.com...
This one is BETTER Phantom HD Gold :
www.highspeedcameras.com...
We can talk them down to $110,000 per camera if we buy 8 cameras at once
and about $20,000 each for the 240 HZ fibre interconnect displays.
Since we are recording only 120 minutes for launch and deployment
purposes we can get away with 20 Petabytes (10,000 Terabytes) of
storage which will be 4 terabyte disks in a parallel data path storage
array system at a proprosed 8:1 or 12:1 Compression ratio using a
REAL-TIME FPGA-based JPEG-2000 Intra-Frame CODEC. That's only
about $550,000 for the storage using cheap but still good 7200 RPM hard disks.
One INTERESTING feature is being able to BYPASS the 1000 MPH
GPS (Global Positioning System) location limit for moving objects
by using multiple signals and figuring out the amount of
TIMING JITTER in each GPS signal and then extrapolating
a NEW real-world position in 3D-XYZ space EVEN IF
an object moves more than 1000 MPH.
We have a proprietary algorithm to do that
GPS JITTER DETECTION and extrapolation.
---
Another technological tour-de-force will be advanced
compression of video for a super-compressed real-time
INTERFRAME video stream using multiple microwave
transmitters so that we can actually GET the estimated
800 Megabits (100 Megabits per camera at 1080p 60fps)
per second we will need to broadcast a LIVE 8-camera
signal from the heavy left vehicle to ground.
(i.e. 10+ transponders at 100 Mb/s per transponder
using 64 Symbols per PSK at Ku or C bands) The other
headroom is used for the much higher quality FTP-like
recorded video file transfer and realtime telemetry data.
With a big enough onboard RAM-DISK buffer (petabyte+)
we ALSO download the original high quality JPEG2000
recorded video to our earth-based hard disks in
segments that are outside of the lower-quality
live interframe broadcast stream.
edit on 2016/2/19 by StargateSG7 because: sp
edit on 2016/2/19 by StargateSG7 because: sp
edit on 2016/2/19 by
StargateSG7 because: sp