TEM vision software

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The software runs under GNU/Linux and it makes use of [http://damien.douxchamps.net/ieee1394/libdc1394/ Damien Douxchamps' libdc1394] to access the camera and [ftp://lx10.tx.ncsu.edu/pub/Linux/drivers/ Warren Jasper's PCI-DIO24 driver] to access the PCI-card which interfaces with the SPM controller.
 
The software runs under GNU/Linux and it makes use of [http://damien.douxchamps.net/ieee1394/libdc1394/ Damien Douxchamps' libdc1394] to access the camera and [ftp://lx10.tx.ncsu.edu/pub/Linux/drivers/ Warren Jasper's PCI-DIO24 driver] to access the PCI-card which interfaces with the SPM controller.
  
The software was implemented in [http://www.ruby-lang.org/ Ruby] using [http://rubyforge.org/projects/korundum/ Qt4-QtRuby], [[HornetsEye]], and a custom Ruby-extension to access the SPM controller via the PCI-DIO24 card. [http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/DRb.html Distributed Ruby] and multiple processes were used to work around the problem that Ruby-1.8 does not offer native threads.
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The software was implemented in [http://www.ruby-lang.org/ Ruby] using [http://rubyforge.org/projects/korundum/ Qt4-QtRuby], [[HornetsEye]], [http://dotgnu.org/libjit-doc/libjit.html libJIT], and a custom Ruby-extension to access the SPM controller via the PCI-DIO24 card. [http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/DRb.html Distributed Ruby] and multiple processes were used to work around the problem that Ruby-1.8 does not offer native threads.
  
 
The vision algorithms are configured using a separate program and the configuration is saved in a file using [http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Marshal.html Ruby marshalling]. A plugin-based architecture, which accepts plugins for recognition and tracking, was implemented which allows one to select and configure '''Normalised Cross-Correlation''', '''Lucas-Kanade tracking''', or '''Connected Component Analysis'''.
 
The vision algorithms are configured using a separate program and the configuration is saved in a file using [http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Marshal.html Ruby marshalling]. A plugin-based architecture, which accepts plugins for recognition and tracking, was implemented which allows one to select and configure '''Normalised Cross-Correlation''', '''Lucas-Kanade tracking''', or '''Connected Component Analysis'''.

Revision as of 21:33, 26 June 2009

Demonstration of TEM vision software including telemanipulation as well as closed-loop control using machine-vision feedback (also available as DivX3 videos configuration.avi (64 MByte), closed-loop.avi (44 MByte), and interaction.avi (19 MByte))
Prototype using Distributed Ruby for vision-based closed-loop control

As part of the Nanorobotics project a TEM vision software was developed. The software makes use of a JEOL 3010 transmission electron microscope with a TVIPS FastScan-F114 camera which is an IIDC/DCAM-compatible firewire camera. The nano-indenter is controlled by a Nanomagnetics SPM controller (the old version of the controller can be accessed with a PCI-DIO24 card).

The software runs under GNU/Linux and it makes use of Damien Douxchamps' libdc1394 to access the camera and Warren Jasper's PCI-DIO24 driver to access the PCI-card which interfaces with the SPM controller.

The software was implemented in Ruby using Qt4-QtRuby, HornetsEye, libJIT, and a custom Ruby-extension to access the SPM controller via the PCI-DIO24 card. Distributed Ruby and multiple processes were used to work around the problem that Ruby-1.8 does not offer native threads.

The vision algorithms are configured using a separate program and the configuration is saved in a file using Ruby marshalling. A plugin-based architecture, which accepts plugins for recognition and tracking, was implemented which allows one to select and configure Normalised Cross-Correlation, Lucas-Kanade tracking, or Connected Component Analysis.

Contents

Demonstration

1. The vision algorithms are configured
2. The SPM axes are calibrated against the camera image
3. Using closed-loop control the nano-indenter is moved along a linear path
Moving the tip using "drag-and-drop" does not require vision feedback. The circle marks the initial position of the mouse-cursor
Here vision-based closed-loop control is used to control the position of the tip. The cross-and-circle marks the last known position of the nano-indenter. The cross marks the current nominal position

Future Work

Possible future work is

  • port to Ruby-1.9 which has native threads
  • integrate serial-port interface of JEOL TEM
  • feature-based recognition and tracking (less sensitive to brightness changes)

See Also


External Links

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