Abstract:
A system for transmitting information from a plurality of observation stations to a central station, especially for military purposes. Every observation station is equipped with a coder and a code transmitter for selecting and transmitting code signs corresponding to the observations. Preferably the coder comprises a key set provided with a key for each kind of observation. The coded information from the different observation stations is transmitted on separated wave-lengths or channels and received in a central station and stored together with time information in a computer memory to be presented in assembled form whenever needed.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
     This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 794,412 filed on May 6, 1977, now abandoned. 
    
    
     GENERAL BACKGROUND 
     Imagine a number of operative units, which via communication radio are in connection with a guidance central. The operative units can be vehicles, airplanes or vessels giving reports concerning their positions, arrived activities etc. The reports constitute the base for the actions, which are ordered from the guidance central. In the guidance central must exist a &#34;memory&#34; about what has been reported, at least during a restricted time. This is usually effected by means of a sort of notations. It is however evident, that the problems in connections herewith are growing with the number of the operative units, which are to be guided from the guidance central. 
     For the operative units the problem is, to send the reports as quickly and uncomplicated as possible. It ought to be observed that reporting often must be done when &#34;something happens&#34; i.e. in a hurry. 
     BRIEF SUMMARY OF INVENTION 
     The present reporting system provide a solution of the proposed problems. In a few words the solution consists in that the conventional radio communication system, based on speech communication, is completed with further sets of apparatus, so that binary coded transferring can be effected of the latter type of information, which is decided to have such great importance that it during a limited time period must be stored in the guidance central, constituting part of basis for decisions. The reporting system is not a general system, but it must have such properties that it can be adapted to the type of information, which shall be transferred and treated or in other words according to what shall be &#34;built in&#34; in the system. The binary coded form gives the following advantages: 
     arrived reports can automatically be completed with the origin and time arrival, 
     arrived reports can automatically be treated, for example be interpreted if it should be necessary, 
     arrived reports can be temporary stored in an easy restorable way in order to get a surveyable presentation on a suitable medium, for example printer, table, screen. 
     When studying the behaviour of different units, for example certain artillery and guided missile units, tanks, aircraft etc, in a test battle situation, there are observers at or aboard the different operative units. The observers report verbally via a communication ratio transmitter to a central receiving station how the different occurrences or courses of events develop in the battle situation. The reporting may for example have reference to target discovery, target designation, fire, estimated hits etc. At the receiving station every operative unit is assigned to a separate channel in the recording medium at the station, a multichannel tape recorder. A common time-code is registered for all the channels. When the registering is finished, in most cases after several successive working periods have been covered, a listening is made in each channel and reports are drawn up, which together will form the basis for the evaluation of the test. 
     Owing to the manual manner of proceeding a long time may pass from the occurrence of a battle situation until an evaluated result is available. The question has therefore been put if an automatization of the information processing could be realized. The manner of proceeding can of course also be performed in connection with real battle situations. 
     It seems rather reasonable that the information, which is to be transmitted in a battle situation, can be structured in a relatively limited number of terms determined in advance. Consequently, the present invention is based on the use of a coded, preferably binary coded, transmission of information instead of a verbal transmission of information. Each of the observers are therefore equipped with an apparatus supplied with a key set. Every single key represents a determined information and is assigned to a special code. The coded information is preferably transmitted via the communication radio transmitter to the receiving station, where it will be registered (stored). The information is now present in such a form that it can directly be subjected to automatic data processing. 
     The characteristics of the system according to the present invention will appear in more detail from the detailed description, the drawings, and appended claims. 
     The amount of information during a working period, i.e., during a certain continuous course of events, is probably relatively limited, even in an enlarged system, and the processing, at least in a first stage, will be restricted to simple sorting and presentation, for which reason a computer of restricted size (minicomputer) connected on-line may be used. 
     The system ought to be realized by using mainly already existing standard units and commercially available components. The code for information transmission is for example the so-called Teletype code, which is commonly used in computer connections. The Teletype code is an extension of the ASCII code, which is standardized (ISO/R 648). The code comprises 64 (i.e. 2 6 ) information carrying characters (letters, figures, signs), which gives an outer frame for the key set design. To the information carrying keys there is added a RUB-OUT-key, to be used when key errors are made. The keys may be provided with built-in lamps, which are lighted, when the key is depressed, or else a control display may be arranged on the apparatus, whereby the display shows, which keys have been depressed in a given observation situation. 
     The coded information from every depressed key is transmitted in series form. The speed of transmission is normally 10 signs/sec, i.e. 110 Baud. The transmission of the binary coded information will be done in a wireliss way on separated wave-lengths or channels for the different observation stations. The modulation is preferably effected by means of a subcarrier wave. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS 
     An embodiment of a system according to the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. 
     FIG. 1 is a block-diagram of the system of the present invention. 
     FIG. 2 is a diagram showing the key set connected to an encoder and shows, in a separate diagram the pulse signals generated by the encoder. 
     FIG. 3 is a diagram of a monolithic circuit of a Frequency-Shift-Keying-type (FSK) modulator, and the shape of the signals are shown on the input and output side in a separate diagram. 
     FIG. 4 is a diagram for a demodulator of FSK-type at the central station and shows, in a separate diagram, the shape of the signal on the input and output sides of the demodulator. 
     FIG. 5 is a diagram showing the general connections between a bus and the demodulators, the presentation device and the controlling set, the latter consisting essentially of a micro-processor, a program memory, a data memory and a clock. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Referring to FIG. 1 the different units will now be described more in detail. 
     The different observation stations have each a coder marked K 1  --K n  in FIG. 1. The function and construction of the coders will be explained by help of FIG. 2. For transferring information (reporting) a special key set 20 is used consisting of 10 to about 60 keys. Every key has its own entry on an encoder 21. 
     By depression of a key the encoder gives an output consisting of a pulse train 22. The pulse train starts with a start pulse (1 bit) and ends with a stop pulse (2 bits). The space between the start and the stop pulses gets a bit pattern according to the depressed key that is the character, which shall be transmitted. The bit pattern from the encoder which can be described as a sequence of &#34;1&#34;:s or &#34;0&#34;:s is preferably following the ISO/R 646 (=USASC II) code. The time-length of the pulse train is defined by the rate generator 23, which normally is adjusted for a transferring frequency of 110 bits per second. 
     Every coder in FIG. 2 is connected to a modulator as shown in FIG. 3. In the block diagram in FIG. 1 the modulators are marked m 1  --m n . The modulator in FIG. 3 consists of a monolithic circuit of Frequency-Shift-Keying-type (FSK-type), which comprises current switches 30, giving current levels corresponding to &#34;1&#34; and &#34;0&#34;, defined by external resistances. The gained voltages are brought to a voltage controloscillator 31, which will shift between two frequencies, 1185 Hz and 1095 Hz for &#34;1&#34; and &#34;0&#34; respectively. A sine wave shaper 32 improves the shape of the signal, which via a matching circuit 33 now as output can be fed tothe speech input circuit of a radio transmitter. The waveform at the input respectively output side of the modulator is shown with help of the signaldiagram 34, FIG. 3. The radio system, which according to FIG. 1 uses a number of transmitters S 1  --S n  corresponding to the number of receivers M 1  --M n , is based on conventional radio communication technics. Every channel has its own frequency, f 1  --f n . The reports in digital form by means of the key set and the coder can be affected without setting the speech communication out of function. To prevent a receiver at the central station from being switched over to transmitting position when reports are transmitted, a red lamp in each channel lights as long as there is an incoming carrier wave from the observation station. The output of every receiver M 1  --M n  is connected to a demodulator d 1  --d n  as is shown in the block diagram, FIG. 1. FIG. 4 shows the construction of a demodulator of FSK-type, which corresponds to the modulator on the transmitter side but has a reversed function. The demodulator is based on a monolithic phase-locked loop system. This comprises a preamplifier 40, a loop phase-detector 41 and a voltage control oscillator 42. The input signal tothe preamplifier 40, shifting between two frequencies, will be controlled by the voltage control oscillator 42, which gets its control voltage from the loop phase-detector 41. The control voltage corresponds to &#34;1&#34; or &#34;0&#34;.By help of an internal reference voltage 43 and a FSK-comparator 44 and &#34;1&#34;and &#34;0&#34; will be locked to fixed voltage levels and in this way generating adata output signal. The signal diagram 45 illustrates the wave shape at theinput respectively output of the demodulator. A quadrature phase-detector 46 and a lock detector comparator 47 belongs to the system for giving eventually necessary synchronizing signals to the data output pulse train. 
     Each demodulator is on the output side connected to its own interface, g 1  --g n , FIG. 1. The interfaces are included in a control unit, FIG. 5, consisting of a number of boards, functionally connected by a micro-processor in chip-form (Motorola). To the control unit, FIG. 5, can 10 demodulators be connected via an equally number of interface boards 50,which also are designated as Asynchronous Communications Interface Adaptersor ACIA. The 10 ACIA boards will each accomplish a series-parallel-transforming with adaption to the bit-frequency, 110 bits/sec, which is applied in the transmission part of the system. An ACIA-board 51, in FIG. 1 G 2 , constitutes interface to the terminal, printer or display, in FIG. 1 denoted U, which shall present the reports from the observation stations. This ACIA-board accomplishes a parallel-series-transforming with adaption to a considerably higher bit-frequency, up to 9 600 bits/sec, depending on the capacity of the presentation device. 
     The control unit is controlled by a micro-processor MP, FIG. 1, connected to a time-transmitter TG, activating the micro-processor during operation.In FIG. 5 the micro-processor is represented by the CPU-board 52 (CPU=Central Processing Unit). The program for controlling, the program memory PM, FIG. 1, is permanent and indestructible stored on a PROM-board 53, FIG. 5 (PROM=Programmable Read Only Memory). Temporary storing of incoming data, data memory DM, FIG. 1, is done in the control unit by helpof a RAM-board 54, FIG. 5 (RAM=Randon Access Memory). The time-giving unit T in FIG. 1 consists of a clockboard 55 giving time pulses every second with power frequency as reference. Space is reserved for a board 56, in FIG. 1 G 1 , by help of which the control unit can be connected together with an ordinary computer D in FIG. 1. All board-units are connected with a bus 57 transferring address-data and control signals between the units. 
     The control unit functions as a buffer against the coded reports from the observation stations. The reports are completed with information about theorigin of the code signals, which appears from the address, every ACIA-board has been labelled with, and by help of the clock-board, the arrival time. The unit transfers thereafter the information to the presentation device. For this purpose a stored program amounting to 2 k-bytes in PROM is necessary. 
     The invention is not limited to the described embodiment but a great numberof modifications and variations thereof are possible within the scope of the appended claims.