Triton TargetPro Manuel d'utilisateur

Naviguer en ligne ou télécharger Manuel d'utilisateur pour Logiciel Triton TargetPro. Triton TargetPro User Manual Manuel d'utilisatio

  • Télécharger
  • Ajouter à mon manuel
  • Imprimer

Résumé du contenu

Page 1 - Using TargetPro

Using TargetProTM User’s Manual Software documentation through 2.3 June 2004

Page 2 - Copyright Notice

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 1: Overview of the Software 1.1 Software Architecture 1.1.1 What is TargetPro? TargetPro is a softwar

Page 3 - Safety Precautions

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual • Microsoft Windows Paint (*.PCX files, which support color as well as black and white) • Microsoft Window

Page 4

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 1.2 System Requirements You need the following: • A Pentium-class personal computer running Windows NT, Wind

Page 5 - AND LIMITED WARRANTY

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 1. Typical listing of TEI software installation folders. TEI software is compatible with Windows NT

Page 6

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual • Each application is installed by browsing to the appropriate folder (for example, Isis5.50 Install) on the

Page 7

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual  The addition of a folder called [TEIdlls] in the Windows, Win95 or WINNT folder, and  a modification to

Page 8

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 2. Modify, Repair, Remove choices during installation. You will need to remove the old version of t

Page 9

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 2: Using TargetPro If you’ve installed the TargetPro software and have it running, you can use it to

Page 10 - 1.1 Software Architecture

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 3. Initial screen (empty) after first running TargetPro. Because you have not yet opened a file for

Page 11

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual • PCM Image (*.PCM, which are compressed ESC image files) • Joint Photographic Experts Group (*.JPEG and *.JP

Page 12 - 1.3 Software Installation

Copyright Notice This software is copyrighted and licensed for use on one computer per copy. Triton Elics International grants permission to the purch

Page 13

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 4. Typical file opened in TargetPro After a file has been opened, the original list of menu items (

Page 14

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual • the Cursor Status window • taskbar icons • Status Bar In the taskbar area, all icons except for the Open i

Page 15 - 1.3.2 Installing TargetPro

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual and threshold. See ‘Pan and Display-Only Properties Windows’ for more detailed information on this window. C

Page 16

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Distance: This is the distance between the end-points of the rubber-band line drawn from one contact to anoth

Page 17 - Chapter 2: Using TargetPro

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Towfish Range: This is the range from the towfish to the current point, either the cursor or the object being

Page 18 - 2.2 Opening a File

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual For space reasons, the icons appear in this book in two rows. In the TargetPro program, the icons are laid o

Page 19

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual TABLE 3. Group Three: Zoom and Pan Icons Fit to Window. Fills the current display area, out to the neares

Page 20

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual TABLE 4. Group Four: Image Management Icons Measurement Tool. When selected, this icon enables five more ic

Page 21

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual TABLE 5. Group Five: Measurement Pointer Icons Note: The Measurement Tool (see Table 3, ‘Group Three:

Page 22

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 2.5.1 The Pan Window The small, redockable Pan window acts as a visual aid to show you what part of the total

Page 23

Safety Precautions Please adhere to the hardware and software precautions mentioned below. In addition, observe all safety precautions mentioned i

Page 24 - 2.4 Icons on the Taskbar

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual deviation between the dark and light parts of an image. Sliding the contrast indicator to the left along the

Page 25

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 3: Measuring a Contact You can measure, or mensurate, any part of a displayed contact. After a contac

Page 26

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 7. Length Adjust concept and relationship to length and line 3.1.2 Length Rotation (L Rot.) is the ro

Page 27

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 8. Length Rotation angle sign conventions 3.1.3 Beam Width (Beam W.) is the width of the beam in groun

Page 28

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 3.2 Width Width is the across-track ground distance between the start and end points of a drawn line. The Me

Page 29 - 2.5.1 The Pan Window

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 3.3 Height Such objects cast an acoustic shadow on the side facing away from the towfish. The length (or ac

Page 30

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 3.4 General Directions for Object Mensuration 1. Activate Measurement Tool (choose Tools→Measure from the mai

Page 31 - 3.1 Length

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 3.4.1 Measure Distance Use this method to mensurate a distance in your imagery. A distance can cover any part

Page 32 - 3.1.2 Length Rotation

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 13. Measure Object Echo-Shadow (Tied) Example with Data In the example, the green line is the object

Page 33 - 3.1.4 Number of Pings

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual A drawn, magenta line is completed. This is the object’s length. TargetPro also quantitatively states the co

Page 34 - 3.2 Width

SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT By opening this package, you agree to be bound by the terms of this Agreement, which include the software license and the

Page 35 - 3.3 Height

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 14. Mensuration lines on a contact image with data. 3.5 Object Detection TargetPro can automatically

Page 36 - Measure)

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual As part of the object/region growing measurement process, TargetPro can be configured to control the degree of

Page 37 - 3.4.1 Measure Distance

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 15. Object Detection Window, settings and activation (Go). Figure 16. Object Detection Window resul

Page 38 - 3.4.3 Measure Object Length

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual more red lines connect the centers of mass of the objects to their shadows. Numbers in the image field indicat

Page 39 - 3.4.5 Measure Object Shadow

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 4: Object Modification and Classification 4.1 The Electronic Light Table TargetPro’s Electronic Light

Page 40 - 3.5 Object Detection

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 17. Typical contact copied into the Electronic Light Table. 4.1.1 The Histogram Window The Histogram

Page 41

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual mutually exclusive from RGB, which indicates a non-monochromatic image.) You can deselect or reselect the col

Page 42

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual • Top (slider bar): Crops the image p pixels at a time from the top; moving the slider bar to the right incre

Page 43

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Below the slider bars in this area are five buttons. They are Vignette, Adapt. Norm, Sliding Window, Despeckl

Page 44 - Classification

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual  Bell: All values are distributed evenly around the center of the scale. This produces a high-contrast image

Page 45 - 4.1.1 The Histogram Window

LIMITED WARRANTY TRITON ELICS warrants that (a) the SOFTWARE will perform substantially in accordance with the accompanying written materials for a p

Page 46 - 4.1.2 The Statistics Area

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual is the neutral point, meaning the colors are not shifted one way or the other from their values. • Saturatio

Page 47

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual original file unless you save the file from TargetPro’s main menu using File→Save As. 4.1.8 Annotate This fun

Page 48

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 1. From the main menu choose Tools→Classify. The system displays a dialog box (Figure 17) where you can ins

Page 49

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 20. New classification added to list of available classes. 2. Click Apply to associate the assignme

Page 50 - 4.1.6 The Audit Trail Area

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 21. Classification dialog box (From Tools→Classify) As the Rank area of the dialog box shows, you ca

Page 51 - 4.2 Classifying a Target

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual TargetPro’s geocorrecting function can compensate for this distortion in contact (CON) or target (TGT) files

Page 52

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 22. Geometrical Correction Parameters dialog box An explanation of the geocorrecting choices availabl

Page 53

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 23. Example of a distorted image before geocorrection In Figure 23, the image appears greatly squas

Page 54 - Classify)

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 24. Example of a geocorrected image as a TIFF file Figure 24 shows a geocorrected rendition of the C

Page 55

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 1. From the main menu choose Tools→Set Contact Number. The system displays the Set Contact Number dialog bo

Page 57

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 5: TargetPro Menu 5.1 The File Menu The File menu consolidates all the basic functions of TargetPro.

Page 58

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Table 7 explains these menu choices. TABLE 7. File menu choices described Task Choice Meaning or Action

Page 59

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Save As Instead of (or in addition to) saving your Target images as CON or TGT files, you can save them in

Page 60 - Chapter 5: TargetPro Menu

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 27. Print ASCII Report dialog box (File→Print ASCII Report) Chapter 5: TargetPro Menu 52

Page 61

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 28. Contact Search Criteria dialog box (from File→Find) The Contact Search Criteria dialog box is mo

Page 62

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual is internal to the system; the user gets no visual feedback when the reset is performed. • All: All contact

Page 63 - Print ASCII Report)

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual identify a contact description. The Classify function, the Geocorrect function, the Cursor, Pan Image, Zoom,

Page 64

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual FIGURE 30. TargetPro Configuration dialog box and default settings Table 8 explains the available parameters

Page 65 - 5.3 The Tools Menu

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Layback (radio buttons) You can specify a layback of a recording towfish’s position from a survey vessel in t

Page 66

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Speed Display Units (radio buttons) These are the different units you can specify for the speed of survey ves

Page 67

CHAPTER 1: OVERVIEW OF THE SOFTWARE 1 1.1 SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE 1 1.1.1 What is TargetPro? 1 1.1.2 What File Types

Page 68

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual 5.3.2 RAMP Support Support for RAMP (Rapid Access Mission Profile) is available from the Tools menu for those

Page 69

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual If you choose From Registry, the system registry is inspected to determine the current location of the RAMP f

Page 70 - 5.3.2 RAMP Support

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 32. Typical TAG270 Information dialog box Chapter 5: TargetPro Menu 61

Page 71

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual All information that may be present in the Tag 270 will be populated in the appropriate fields shown in Figur

Page 72 - Chapter 5: TargetPro Menu 61

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Figure 33. Example TAG270 Audit Trail information window. 5.4 The Window Menu If you have more than one fi

Page 73

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Toolbar, Status Bar, Pan Window, Display Control (governing the display of the Display-Only Properties window

Page 74 - 5.5 The View Menu

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Chapter 6: Troubleshooting Problem: After about five minutes the installation does not complete and the Win

Page 75 - 5.6 The Help Menu

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Solution: This message alerts you that CFG files created with versions of Isis earlier than this version of

Page 76 - Chapter 6: Troubleshooting

June 2004 TargetPro™ User's Manual Problem: You receive an error message during installation of TEI software. For example, you may see this me

Page 77

June 2004 TargetPro™ User’s Manual The effect of speed correction on images from TargetPro and Target. By default, in both applications, speed correct

Page 78

3.1.3 Beam Width 24 3.1.4 Number of Pings 24 3.2 WIDTH 25 3.2.1 Width Adjust 25 3.2.2 Width Rotation

Page 79

June 2004 TargetPro™ User’s Manual Sample images from Target Pro: Not speed corrected (note the dimensions 256x256 pixels) Speed correct

Page 80

June 2004 TargetPro™ User’s Manual Sample images from Target: Not speed corrected. (256x256) Speed correcte

Page 81 - Sample images from Target:

June 2004 TargetPro™ User’s Manual All images are from a Klein 3000 sonar, High Frequency channel operating at range of 100m and are from Lake Champla

Page 82

June 2004 TargetPro™ User’s Manual TargetPro image saved as a .JPG file and edited in Paintshop Pro Addendum: The Effect of Speed Correction o

Page 83

4.4.1 Setting a Contact Number 47 CHAPTER 5: TARGETPRO MENU 49 5.1 THE FILE MENU 49 5.2 THE EDIT MENU 54 5.3 THE TOOLS

Commentaires sur ces manuels

Pas de commentaire