Abstract:
The invention relates to a method for the optical detection of objects or object streams, wherein the surfaces of the objects or object streams are capable of reflecting or of scattering light, and wherein the objects or object streams can exhibit or form or generate self-affine or self-similar or fractal patterns or structures on the surfaces or in themselves, by employing an illuminating device for illuminating the objects or object streams and an optical imaging and receiving device with a following electronic evaluation for receiving and evaluating the imaging light reflected or scattered by the surfaces. The imaging ray bundle is scanned as a sequence of light patterns, wherein a similitude-transformation algorithm forms the basis of the scanning such that the connection of the individual light patterns relative to each other spatially and/or timely is a scaling or rotation or translation of self-affine or self-similar or fractal, and wherein at least two variables are set up. A storing and actualization of the detection events, resulting from the scanning over the variables, in the form of value pairs, is performed within a memory storage in each one step of the scaling or rotation or translation. The calculation of the scaling or rotation or translation function (for example, in case of a based scaling, the value pairs result in a linear function in case of the presence of a self-similarity of the objects or object streams) is performed by way of the logarithm over the variables of the scaling or rotation or translation.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
   This is a continuation application filed based on application Ser. No. 09/196,295, filed Nov. 19, 1998, now abandoned, which in turn is a continuation application of parent application Ser. No. 08/640,943, filed May 6, 1996, now abandoned which is a 371 of PCT/DE94/01321 Jan. 10, 1994. 

   STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT 
   Not relevant 
   REFERENCE OF A “MICROFICHE APPENDIX” (SEE 37 CFR 1.96) 
   Not relevant 
   BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   1. Field of the Invention 
   The invention relates to a method for the optical detection of objects or object streams, such as resting objects or moving object streams, wherein their surfaces are capable of reflecting or scattering light, and which objects can exhibit, or can form, or can generate self-affine or self-similar or fractal patterns or structures on the surfaces or in themselves according to the preamble of claim  1 . 
   2. Description of the Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 1.98. 
   Self-similar or self-affine or fractal formations or structures are testimonies of an omnipresent structure type, represented in the surrounding objects and the processes in the nature. The Koch curve or the Sierpinski triangle are cited as classic self-similar or, respectively, fractal formations in geometric-mathematical representation. A structure is designated as exactly self-similar if it can be subdivided into arbitrarily small parts, of which each part is a small copy of the complete structure, whereby it is important that the small parts are generated from the complete structure by a similitude transformation. Two objects are in this situation similar if they exhibit, disregarding their size, the same shape; transformations between the objects, where the transformations include connections of scalings, rotations, and translations, are in this case similitude transformations. 
   Natural self-affine structures appear less ideally in the environment; they are more or less stochastically modulated and in particular the defining property of the invariance to scaling is often limited to certain size ranges of the structure-forming features, in this case one calls the situation to be self-affine to self-similar. Similarly, several different self-affine or fractal structures can appear superposed as multi-fractals. The fractal dimension or self-similar dimension (FD) is employed, among others, as measurement size or characteristic size both for the mathematical-ideal fractals as well as for natural fractals, wherein the fractal dimension or self-similar dimension (FD) appears as a rational number and is a measurement of the degree of the complexity of the connections or, respectively, the width of variation of two values, wherein the self-similar dimension FD follows a low of exponentiation. 
   A measurement-technical use of the self-similar dimension has up to now hardly found any application in the quality control and the process control. In fact, the self-affinity or, respectively, fractals appear in many natural patterns, however in a variety of phenotypes, which are viewed as measurement-technically impeding the measurement, such that the evaluation of fracture faces, of pore patterns or of scar patterns, of bubbles in foams, of folding patterns, or of wetting faces can in most cases only be performed according to the appearance to the eye. In principle, such a capturing by way of a picture data processing with a video camera and a storage medium would be possible, however in connection with a very specific system adaptation and thus, at the end, an uninteresting relationship between costs and use value. Furthermore, an overirradiation of the feature by secondary light in case of connected images of surfaces generates also an information loss for a subsequent picture data processing by way of a video camera. For this purpose, the fracture faces or textures, which are frequently carriers of self-affine patterns to self-similar patterns, are very much subject to interference. 
   A device for the large-area optical topography measurement for investigating diffuse-reflecting surfaces by way of projected patterns on the object surfaces has become known from the German Printed Patent document DE-U1-9301901. Furthermore, a method for the measurement of the roughness of the surface of work pieces has become known from the German Printed Patent document DE-A1-3532690, wherein the surface of irradiated with light and the distribution of the intensity of the reflected light is measured with a converter and the signal of roughness is calculated therefrom. Furthermore, it is known from P. Pfeifer “Fractal Dimension as Working Tool for Surface-Roughness Problems” in Applications of Surface Science 18, 1984, pp. 146-164, Amsterdam, that the fractal dimension can be employed for determining the roughness of surfaces. 
   BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   Object of the Invention 
   It is an object of the invention to monitor, to capture or, respectively, to evaluate by way of optical means the surfaces of objects or of object streams, such as resting objects or moving object streams, i.e. also courses of processes, in order to be able, based on the optical capture of patterns or structures, to make statements relative to the quality or properties of the object or of the stream of objects or, respectively, the course of the processes, as long as such objects or object streams exhibit self-affinity or self-similitude or fractals in the investigated region. The invention is also based on the purpose to allow a determination of the speed of the relative motion of a moved object relative to the imaging device and to the receiving device. 
   Disclosure of the Invention and its Advantages 
   The solution of the object comprises according to the invention that
         a) the imaging ray bundle is scanned as a sequence of light patterns, wherein a similitude-transformation algorithm forms the basis of the scanning in such a way that the connection of the individual light patterns to each other spatially and/or timely is a scaling or rotation or translation of self-affine or self-similar or fractal and that at least two variables are set up,   b) a storage and actualization of the detection events, resulting from the scanning over the variables, in the form of value pairs, is performed within a memory storage in each one of the steps of the scaling or rotation or translation,   c) the calculation of the scaling function or the rotation function or the translation function (for example, the value pairs result in a linear function upon presence of self-similitude of the objects of object streams in case a scaling forms the basis) occurs over the variables of the scaling or rotation or translation by way of their logarithm.       

   A device for the performing of the method is characterized by
         a) an optical device, which is capable of scanning the imaging ray bundle as a sequence of light patterns, wherein a similitude-transformation algorithm is the basis of the scanning such that the connection of the individual light patterns to each other spatially and/or timely is a scaling or rotation or translation of self-affine or self-similar or fractal, and wherein at least two variables are set up,   b) there occurs a storage and actualization of the detection events, resulting from the scanning over the variables, in the way of value pairs within a memory storage within each one of the steps of the scaling or rotation or translation,   c) the calculation of the scaling function or the rotation function or the translation function (for example, the value pairs result in a linear function upon presence of self-similitude of the objects or object streams in case a scaling forms the basis) occurs over the variables of the scaling or rotation or translation by way of their logarithm. Further advantageous embodiments of the inventions are characterized in the remaining subclaims.       

   In an advantageous way, the illuminating ray bundle can also be modulated with a sequence of light patterns, wherein a similitude-transformation algorithm forms the basis of the modulation such that the connection of the individual light patterns to each other spatially or timely is a scaling or rotation of translation of self-affine or self-similar or fractal, and where at least two variables are set up, wherein the modulation of the illuminating ray bundle, the scanning of the imaging ray bundle, as well as the control of the storage for receiving the value pairs are tuned to each other in a controlled way by way of a control. 
   In connection with the scanning of the imaging ray bundle and/or the modulation of the illuminating ray bundle, it is preferred that the light patterns of the generated sequences are scaled and comprise a group of illuminating faces (light pattern elements), which form a scaling of self-affine or exactly self-similar or fractal light patterns in the plane with respect to at least one common property, namely spatially and/or timely, when a self-affine or exactly self-similar or fractal pattern or a self-affine or exactly self-similar or fractal structure is to be recognized as a constant. The number of memory channels formed is the same as the number of variables selected or, respectively, present. Further advantageous embodiments of the invention are characterized in the subclaims. 
   The invention is associated with the advantage that processes can be monitored or patterns or structures can be recognized with the invention method in order to determine the underlying, self-similar process or the underlying object, which carries the respective self-similar pattern or the respective self-similar structure. It is a precondition that the process or the object exhibits self-similitude or, respectively, self-affinity or is a fractal, because self-similar or, respectively, fractal structures are indicators for the processes generating them. Since self-affinity occurs in many processes and natural patterns, a determination of the process or, respectively, of the object is possible such that, based on the method which generates as it were an expected image, there is available an industrial practical testing or a process control with a fractal dimension (FD) determination by way of which the fracture faces, pore patterns and scar patterns, folding patterns, or wetting faces, or bubble formations in foams and liquids can be monitored and monitored according to the expected image. The core of the invention comprises to illuminate and to activate objects or object streams by way of self-affine or self-similar up to fractal structured light patterns and to determine thereby the fractal-dimension (FD) function of the object for detection of self-affine, self-similar or fractal patterns or structures of objects or object streams. 
   The terms “scaling,” “rotation,” and “translation” are understood as mathematical terms. In the following, a similitude-transformation algorithm is mainly a scaling, wherein in the same way rotation or translation functions can form the basis of similitude-transformation algorithm. 
   In case of a scaling, for example, elements of varying size are counted in a test pattern according to at least one parameter, for example the size, wherein at least two variables are forming the basis of the different size, where the variables can be in the x-y plane or in the x-y plane and the time axis or in the x plane or in the y plane and the time axis; this means that the parameter or the variable “size” is scaled or normalized. Value pairs can be recorded as a result, where the value pairs allow a statement relative to the frequency or the covering density of the differently sized elements relative to a grid (standard grid value). In case of only one single scanning point, the activation pattern or, respectively, points can also only be disposed on the time axis. 
   Thus, the scaling operations, or the rotation operations, or translation operations are performed in an advantageous way on the sensor side, i.e. on the side of the illumination and imaging, wherefor, one is independent relative to the image size and one needs only a reduced data volume relative to a video processing. 
   In order to obtain an optimum selectivity in the detection of optical superpositions of pattern elements and of object features, in certain cases it can be advantageous to structure the activation and receiving side, for example, in order to avoid an overirradiation at fracture faces, in a general way in order to suppress interferences. Certain scaling parameters can require such a channel-forming mutual arrangement, for example, in the scaling through polarization degrees or a discoloration scale (crystal discolorations upon water intercalation in the crystal grid). 
   The searched-for arrangements of features are in most cases random structures, which can require a computational consideration depending on the scaling properties with respect to the more or less perfect covering of the pattern elements and object features. The counting of feature overlappings with scaled grid faces, determination of the box dimension is not affected in this regard. 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Short Description of the drawing, where there is shown in: 
       FIG. 1  an illustration of the principle of the method, 
       FIG. 2  a principle representation of a structure-specific receiving system and evaluation system, where the imaging ray bundle is controlled relative to the algorithm and is optically scanned, 
       FIG. 3  a further principle representation of a structure-specific receiving system and evaluation system, where the imaging ray bundle is controlled relative to the algorithm and is optically scanned, 
       FIG. 4  a section through a device for the sequential generation of light patterns for illumination, 
       FIG. 5  a view of  FIG. 4  rotated by 90 degrees, 
       FIGS. 6  A, B, C partial views corresponding to the sections “A,” “B,” “C” in  FIG. 5 , 
       FIG. 7  a partial view of “D” in  FIG. 5 , 
       FIG. 8  a longitudinal section (A—A) through a further device for the sequential generation of illuminating light patterns, 
       FIG. 9  a section along the line B—B in  FIG. 8 , 
       FIG. 10  an example of a linear illuminating light pattern, 
       FIG. 11  an example of a circular illuminating light pattern, 
       FIG. 12  a construction variation relative to the device of  FIG. 8 , 
       FIG. 13  the respective configuration of object, illuminating pattern, emitter and receiving elements in unfolded representation, 
       FIG. 14  a longitudinal section through a construction variant for a face-covering or two-dimensional scanning with a comparatively broad scanning track, 
       FIG. 15  a section along the line B—B in  FIG. 15 , 
       FIGS. 16   a, b, c, d  a drawn-apart representation of the illumination, of the object surface, of the receiving element array, as well as of the example of the resulting scanning grid, and 
       FIG. 17  a further principle representation of the method. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
   The principle method is illustrated by way of  FIGS. 1 through 3 . An object  10  or, respectively, an object surface is illuminated by way of a light source, wherein, in case of simply positioned detections, either only the illuminating ray bundle (FIGS.  1  and  2 ), or in case of a more complex situation, the imaging light bundle and the illuminating ray bundle ( FIG. 3 ) are scanned or illuminated and scanned with reference to an algorithm as a sequence of light patterns for the detection of class-specific contrasts of the object  10 . The connection of the individual light patterns to each other occurs spatially and/or timely as a scaling of self-affine or self-similar to fractal. For example, four variables Var 1 , Var 2 , Var 3 , Var 4  are established in  FIG. 1 , which correspond to the differently sized light patterns and which are in this case differently sized square receiving elements  1 ,  2 ,  3 ,  4 , S×S, wherein the sizes S×S of the receiving elements are mutually connected based on the selected similitude-transformation algorithm. Within a memory storage there is performed a storage and actualization of the detection results, resulting from the scanning over the variables, by way of value pairs within each step of the scaling. The calculation of the scaling function is performed by way of the logarithm of the scaling over the variables of the scaling, wherein the value pairs, in case of an underlying self-affinity of the searched-for patterns or structures of the object or of the object stream, result in a linear function, i.e. the searched-for scaling function. This function means the plotting of the term log(Var n ) over the term log(1/S) upon normalization or, respectively, the plotting of the term log(S). It is essential that a logarithmization is performed not on the calculator side or on the software side, but that the logarithmization inherent in the method results based on the similitude-transformation algorithm and from the fact that the searched-for patterns or structures are self-similar or self-affine or fractal. 
     FIG. 17  shows a further representation in principle of the architecture of the method. A moving object  10  is illuminated and the imaging light bundle and/or the illumination ray bundle is scanned relative to the algorithm by way of a scaling optic as a sequence of light patterns. The connection of the light patterns and thus the detection of events is performed by way of the counters Z 1 , Z 2 , Z 3 , Z 4 , where the evaluation of the counters results in the fractal dimension FD. 
   A technical structure of a sensor for the sequential generation of light patterns for the illuminating of an object surface  10  is illustrated in  FIGS. 4 through 7 . The functional principle is a class formation of geometrical criteria by way of illuminating patterns on the object and, with respect to the object speed, a variation of the scanning frequency with an illuminating pattern with a simultaneous monitoring of the event noise on an event minimum. The illuminating patterns result from the combination of light pattern projection and illuminating time. 
   A sensor is illustrated in the two main sections through the optical axis  21 . A socket  13  for an emitting and receiving element  14  is disposed within a casing  11  on a printed circuit board  12 , wherein the emitting and receiving element  14  carries a tube  15 , which is closed by way of a window and lens element  16 . A multifocal illuminating imaging lens  17  is mounted below the window and lens element  16 ; the light bundling on the object  10  is performed by the combination of window and lens element  16  and illuminating imaging lens  17 . The illuminating imaging lens  17  exhibits a central region  17 ′ of a special lens structure for the focusing of the illuminating ray bundle  18 , where the illuminating ray bundle  18  is surrounded by a region  17 ″ of the special lens formation for the focusing of the converging ray bundle  19  on the two sides of  17 ′, wherein the region  17 ″ can also be provided torus-shaped around the region  17 ′. 
   The partial view of  FIG. 6  C onto the emitter and receiving element  14  illustrates the geometrical arrangement of emitter and receiving faces of a semiconductor element of the emitter and receiving element  14 . On the two sides of a series arrangement of emitter faces  14 ′ on the horizontal center line there are two receiving faces  14 ″ ,  14 ′″ disposed symmetrically on the vertical center line  22 . 
   According to  FIGS. 6  B and A the bundling of the light onto the object  10  is performed by way of a combination of optical elements or, respectively, optical regions  16 ′ and  17 ′ of the multifocal illuminating imaging lens  17 , which for example in principle is a cylinder lens, constructed as holographic-optical element, within the region  17 ′, which represents a spherical lens region with rectangular form of the width b ( FIG. 6  A). Light reflected or, respectively, scattered by the object  10  is focused over the two lens sections  17 ″ and  17 ′″, disposed on the outside, onto the receiving faces  14 ″,  14 ′″ of the emitter and receiving element  14 .  FIG. 6  B shows the planar view onto the window and lens element  16 , where the region  16 ′ exhibits a rectangular form of the width b, such as the region  17 ′ of the illuminating imaging lens  17 , which region  16 ′ is surrounded on the side by the side region  16 ″,  16 ′″. Structural data and speed determinations, the latter as a reference value for the first, are performed by way of the configuration of semiconductor elements  14 ′ and  14 ″ and their optical coordination to the surface of the object  10  in an alternating mode of operation. 
   The illustration in  FIG. 7  serves for the structural data determination by way of the example of the grid covering: A program-controlled grouping and activation of the emitter faces  14 ′ generates in a time sequence a scale of illuminating faces  23  on the moved object  10 , wherein the illuminating faces  23  are sequences according to the size, i.e. as smallest  23 ′ of the length S min  and as largest  23 ″ of the length S max , as well as based on time period duration. The size sequence and illuminating time are correlated thus that a conductor-shaped scanning grid  24  is placed over the object face  10 , wherein the step width and number of the scanning grid  24  is iterated in a defined way. A class coordinated is synchronized on the receiving side with this illuminating program, for example by way of a partial covering of the respective grid face with the pattern. 
   A repeated, in each case position-staggered activation of an emitter-face configuration is performed on the emitter side for the speed determination, and in the simplest case of, for example only one emitter face. The image  25  thereof scans the object in the window region  26  with a resulting relative speed (from the scanning speed and the window region  26 ), in case of an emitter-side variation of the absolute scanning speed  27 . The “event noise” assumes a minimum value with the directional and value equality of the speeds  20  and  27 , signal flanks of events become flat in proximation to this state. This equality state is controlled in a suitable way on the evaluation side, for example by a feedback to the variation, and is detected: The relative speed of object surface to sensor is then determined from the known actual scanning speed  27 . 
   The counting of the events over size classes of features is performed if desired with this device, wherein actual and known value of an illuminating face size on the emitter side controls filters on the evaluation side, for example time-window dimensioning for closed and finished events. Thus, the optical event noise of fracture faces of an investigation to scale invariance is also accessible, wherein it can be advantageous to separate the two receiving elements by forming classes. 
   A nesting serves for the size-dependent speed determination, wherein in addition, there is iteration over a group of various-sized emitter-face aggregates by way of the sensor control. 
   A sensor element of the above-described kind is set up with respect to dimensioning and operating data to applications with in each case the pattern to be expected. Line scanning and sequential illuminating program thus require corresponding scanning sizes in order to obtain reliable structural data; the pattern variations to be captured have to occur of course on a scanning track. 
   In principle, it is not necessary to be bound to the dimensional faithful imaging of emitter elements or to a rectangular structure of the illuminating pattern. Suitable adaptations can be performed by way of a transformation optic. Emitter and receiving elements can also be disposed, in a construction based on a transmitted light, on a joint optical axis (barrier construction) or as end faces of a light-conducting cable or of a light-conducting adapter part. The arrangement of one or several face elements is possible on the receiving side, wherein these face elements can generate in an integrating way one or several signals with in each case its own evaluation channel. The face elements can be disposed on the emitter side with different lengths (“length-scaled”) 
   A further technical embodiment is illustrated in  FIGS. 8 through 11 . A drive motor  29  is disposed inside a casing  28 , wherein the drive motor  29  drives a rotating hologram carrier  30 , wherein the hologram carrier  30  exhibits two annular functional regions (FIG.  9 ), preferably in the shape of breakouts, i.e. an outer ring with illuminating program to the object and an inner ring for the synchronous evaluation control. At least one functional region serves for the generation of a scaled illuminating ray bundle and at least one functional region serves for the generation of a scaled imaging ray bundle. A photo barrier  31  serves for the scanning of the control value; a receiving diode  32  serves for receiving the scattered or, respectively, reflected light of the object  10 . An illuminating ray bundle  33  is generated by way of a light source  37 , for example a diode laser, which illuminating ray bundle  33  falls through an illuminating and collecting optics  34  onto the object  10  and is reflected or, respectively, scattered from there onto a light-divider mirror  35 , wherein the light-divider mirror  35  guides the light onto the receiving diode  32 . The aggregates are attached at a casing cover  36  of the casing  28  in a suitable way. 
   In case of a quasi non-moving object  10 , the illuminating pattern is generated on the object surface by way of a rotating hologram of the hologram carrier  30  (for example, illuminating face variation and motion), wherein a linear illuminating pattern  38  is shown in  FIG. 10 , and wherein a circular illuminating pattern  39  is illustrated in FIG.  11 . The control size for the signal evaluation referring thereto is synchronously read from the rotating hologram-carrier interior ring, which operates as an optical element. 
   For the purpose of generating parallel illuminating patterns, wherein the aggregates of scaling scanning devices are employed in a series arrangement,  FIG. 12  shows a construction variant with a schematic sectional representation cross to the row or sequence; the scanning motion is performed in this case perpendicular to the drawing face. A light-source array  40  with individually controllable emitter elements is disposed line-shaped within a casing  46 , i.e. perpendicular to the drawing face. An illuminating ray path  42  in the form of light patterns is thrown onto the surface of an object  10  by way of an illuminating optic  41  and the illuminating ray path  42  is reflected or, respectively, scattered from there as an imaging or, respectively, receiving ray path  43 , and is guided over an imaging-receiving optic  44  to receiving elements  45 , wherein the receiving elements  45  are for example photodiodes, which are arranged line-shaped, i.e. perpendicular to the drawing face; the sensor is disposed in a casing  46 . Advantageously, a parallel operation of the element pairs densifies the data capturing, wherein a mutual interference radiation is prevented by way of a spread light strip arrangement. 
   For this purpose,  FIG. 13  schematizes the configuration of object  10 , illuminating pattern, emitter and receiving elements  40 ,  45  in an unfolded representation. The object surface  10  with a strip pattern moves according to the directional arrow  47 ; the emitter elements of the light-source array  40  are disposed parallel thereto. A resulting illuminating pattern  48  is generated by horizontally arranged, strip-shaped light faces  49 ,  49 ′ of a graduated length; the imaging or, respectively, receiving ray path  43  is guided over the sequence of the imaging-receiving optic  44  to the sequence of the receiving elements  45 . 
   The optical structure for the purpose of an exact undistorted illumination and imaging is not illustrated in particular in the  FIGS. 12 and 13 , which can be achieved by way of diaphragms, aspherical components or forming of the emitter or, respectively receiving faces. The receiving optics cover in a sufficient amount in each case a light-strip contour  49 ,  49 ′. The sensor control of this example provides for the purpose of structural data detection that, in case of emitter-side constant light, there is performed a stepped charge integration on the receiving or, respectively, evaluation side, and in fact in constant relation to the object speed  47 . The illuminating pattern  48  results in the example from four superposed, conductor-shaped individual grids of different dimension. The highest scanning frequency corresponds in this case to the smallest light strip  49 . 
   Several illuminating patterns or, respectively, class-forming patterns are simultaneously applied in this structure onto an object, for example, a superposing grid, such as  48 , combined with a window scale of stepped polarization directions, wherein in each case a polarizer and an analyzer can be disposed for this purpose on the emitter and receiving side. Similarly, this concept includes the combination of directional or color classes. 
   Object codings are performed with the combination of such object-close selective class formation and preconstructed patterns for this purpose, wherein the object codings are imitable or decipherable only with difficulty. A further variant provides that natural patterns are scanned with such a sensor configuration and the obtained structural data are documented on the pattern carrier. 
   The sensor shown in the  FIGS. 14 and 15  serves the face-covering scanning and has the purpose to provide a comparatively wider scanning track than it is realized with the described examples. The illuminating pattern is generated by grouping longitudinally scaled receiving elements in several parallel lines with again graduated integration times. 
   An emitter device element  50  with a matrix-shaped arrangement of emitter elements ( FIG. 16   a ) is disposed inside a casing  55 , wherein a variable-power objective of the zoom type  51 , driven by a motor, has the purpose of the system adaptation to a certain size region ( FIG. 16   b ), if necessary, by way of a step balancing. A light divider  54  is disposed within the illuminating and imaging ray path  52 , wherein the light divider  54  deflects the imaging ray bundle to a receiving device element  53 . 
   The light emitter face of the emitter device element  50  is subdivided in grid of individual emitter elements  FIGS. 16   a  mainly for the purpose of the speed determination. In case of a non-uniform object speed in a pattern section  57 ,  FIG. 16   b , the activation of one or several emitter elements  61 ,  61 ′ runs through several scanning tracks and thus delivers an effectively applicable speed. The totality of the receiving element  59  of the receiving-element array  59  is assumed as a receiving element. The motion of the illuminating configuration is rotated by 180 degrees with the illuminating optic  56  for the purpose of speed determination; the imaging ray path is guided to the receiving-element array  59 ,  FIG. 16   c , with the imaging optic  58 . The resulting scanning grid  60  is shown in  FIG. 16   d . The motion of the illuminating configuration for the purpose of speed determination is designated by the reference numeral  63 . 
   Sequential or spread generation of illuminating patterns prevents if required interfering overirradiation, the combination of several class-forming illuminating patterns expands the application to complex structures or as encrypting or encoding element in connection with preconstructed or natural structures. Amongst other things, a speed sensor is created thereby for moving material, which speed sensor can be adapted or, respectively set to certain structural features. 
   The contrasting of the features is performed by way of classical variations of the arrangement of the light impingement and scanning, of light or, respectively, dark field representation, of transmitted light or, respectively, reflected light. The contrasting of features critical for testing of a glazing in the reflected light, of shadow-forming pores in a side impinging light, of coated pills, preferably of the size of 1-4 mm, or of suspensions in the transmitted light occurs for example in this way. Test objects move relative to the sensor-scanning point with a constant speed in case of straight, circular, or zig-zag-shaped scanning track. This technique is well characterized as a “pattern-recognizing light barrier.” The abstract criteria of the fractal dimension and the scaling function, which are primarily detected by the structure sensor, are interpreted depending on the application in a critical view respective to testing. The criteria concerned are such as constancy of the process, maintaining of tolerances, tendencies of development of criteria, class-similar appearing ensembles, homogeneity, uniformity of zones, demixing at edge zones, relative distribution of sizes. 
   The following possible applications of the structural sensor are recited for the food industry: 
                                                       Process   Criteria:                   Comminution, separating   Totality, free of breakage or grinding       Crushing, grating   Relative size distribution, carving       Soaking, stirring   Dissolution of clumps or, respectively,           fractions       Mixing   Distribution of components            Baking   - cut face   Pores, grains           - surface   Scars, bubbles, glazing            Roasting, drying   Allowed structural variation, folding       Sorting   Ensembles of same appearance       Ripening   Surface variations       Fermenting   Development of bubbles, formation of spots       Coagulation   Phase transition, cluster, flocculation       Thickening - plates cubes   Surface variation depending on the object       Solidification by pressure   Homogeneity       Coating   Spots       Feeding of material   Presence of pests, spotty patterns and humidity                    
Commercial Application
 
   The invention is useful in particular for the detection of features of objects with dense, stochastically scattered arrangement of features, for example, at a continuous. Applications are in the food industry, in the technologies of medicine, environment, construction, sintering or energy. For example, granulates, such as grains, flakes, crystals, precipitants, ground material, crushed material, can be investigated relative to random arrangements typical for the material. Depending on the spectrum of size and form, specific weight, roughness, humidity, plasticity, elasticity, surface tension, gloss, color, and mixture, etc. there are present images of appearance which are dependent on process parameters such as pressure, temperature, or foreign components. In the solidified form these form material and process typical structures, which are in general modified by solidification process such as pressing, drying, baking, gluing, sintering, removal or addition of a component. The term granulate structure comprises also appearances which are not caused primarily from corn-shaped materials such as porous fields, bubble formation, fiber properties, waviness, and spot patterns. 
   List of the Reference Numerals 
   
     
       
             
             
           
         
             
                 
             
           
           
             
                1, 2, 3, 4 
               light pattern in the form of receiving elements 
             
             
                5 
               scaling controlled optical scanning of the imaging ray 
             
             
                 
               bundle 
             
             
                6 
               memory storage 
             
             
                7 
               scaling illumination of the illuminating ray bundle 
             
             
                8 
               scaling scanning of the imaging ray bundle 
             
             
                9 
               control 
             
             
               10 
               object surface 
             
             
               11 
               sensor housing 
             
             
               12 
               printed circuit board 
             
             
               13 
               socket for emitter and receiving element 
             
             
               14 
               emitter and receiving element 
             
             
               14′ 
               emitter faces of the emitter and receiving element 
             
             
               14″, 14′′′ 
               receiving faces of the emitter and receiving elements 
             
             
               15 
               tube 
             
             
               16 
               window and lens element 
             
             
               16′, 16″, 16′′′ 
               region of the window and lens elements 
             
             
               17 
               multifocal illumination imaging lens 
             
             
               17′ 
               region of the special lens structure for focusing the 
             
             
                 
               illuminating ray bundle 
             
             
               17″, 17′′′ 
               externally disposed region of the special lens 
             
             
                 
               structure for focusing the light-capturing bundle 
             
             
                 
               on both sides of the region 17′ 
             
             
               18 
               illuminating ray bundle represented in its smallest 
             
             
                 
               extension and in central position 
             
             
               19 
               converging ray bundle on both sides of the region 17′ 
             
             
               20 
               direction of the relative motion between object and 
             
             
                 
               illumination focus 
             
             
               21 
               optical axis 
             
             
               22 
               vertical center line 
             
             
               23 
               illuminating faces 
             
             
               23′, 23″ 
               smallest and largest illuminating faces 
             
             
               24 
               conductor-shaped scanning grid 
             
             
               25 
               image of the emitter face 14′ 
             
             
               26 
               window region 
             
             
               27 
               absolute scanning speed 
             
             
               28 
               casing 
             
             
               29 
               drive motor 
             
             
               30 
               rotating hologram carrier with two circular-shaped 
             
             
                 
               functional regions 
             
             
               31 
               photo barrier for scanning the control value 
             
             
               32 
               receiving diode for scattered or, respectively, 
             
             
                 
               reflected light of the object 
             
             
               33 
               illumination bundle 
             
             
               34 
               illumination and collecting optic 
             
             
               35 
               light-divider mirror 
             
             
               36 
               casing cover with attachment of the individual elements 
             
             
               37 
               light source, for example diode laser 
             
             
               38 
               example of a linear illuminating pattern 
             
             
               39 
               example of a circular illuminating pattern 
             
             
               40 
               light-source array with individually controllable 
             
             
                 
               emitter elements, disposed line-shaped (perpendicular 
             
             
                 
               to the drawing face) 
             
             
               41 
               illuminating optic 
             
             
               42 
               illuminating ray path 
             
             
               43 
               imaging or, respectively, receiving ray path 
             
             
               44 
               imaging receiving optic 
             
             
               45 
               receiving elements, for example photodiodes disposed 
             
             
                 
               line-shaped (perpendicular to the drawing face) 
             
             
               46 
               casing 
             
             
               47 
               directional arrow 
             
             
               48 
               resulting illuminating pattern 
             
             
               49, 49′ 
               strip-shaped light faces of graduated length 
             
             
               50 
               emitter device element with matrix-shaped disposition 
             
             
                 
               of emitter elements 
             
             
               51 
               variable-power objective of the zoom type, driven by a 
             
             
                 
               motor 
             
             
               52 
               illuminating and imaging ray path 
             
             
               53 
               receiving device element 
             
             
               54 
               light divider 
             
             
               55 
               casing 
             
             
               56 
               illuminating optic 
             
             
               57 
               pattern section 
             
             
               58 
               imaging optic 
             
             
               59 
               receiving-element array 
             
             
               60 
               resulting scanning grid 
             
             
               61, 61′ 
               emitter-element configuration for the speed determination 
             
             
               62 
               motion arrow 
             
             
               63 
               motion of the illumination configuration for speed 
             
             
                 
               determination