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Wed, Feb 12, 2003

Virtual Geo Takes Mission Planning Into the 21st Century

Software Helps Plan Missions Using Elevation, Satellite, Threat Data

By ANN Correspondent Juan Jiménez, at Heli Expo 2003

Twenty years ago, at Hughes Radar System Group's facility in El Segundo (CA), this ANN reporter was assigned to work on what was then a very experimental, exciting and promising project. One of the scientists working for the company had developed a computer whose input was terrain elevation data for the city of Los Angeles. My task was to write software that would instruct the computer to "fly" through the terrain. The computer would interpret the commands I sent it and display the moving terrain. The display was barely recognizable -- in fact, the only way to tell that you were seeing moving terrain was to know that that is what it was supposed to show!

The interface software that was my responsibility was finished on time, and a demonstration was scheduled to show a number of military officers what we had accomplished. It was a good thing that these folks had a good imagination, because the screen did not look anything like Los Angeles. Twenty years later, the state of the art in this technology is significantly higher.

CS Information Systems' Virtual Reality department, based out of Toulouse, France, has refined the art of terrain visualization and developed a software package called "Virtual Geo" which allows you to do the same thing we did twenty years ago. This time, though, the screen shows exactly what you should see, in spectacular color and detail.

The base package, priced at €3,000 (approx. US$3,000), makes it possible to visualize and "fly" massive textured terrain databases combined with satellite or raster images. The rendering of the data is extremely detailed and includes all the features that a satellite image can show, including vegetation and detailed terrain features. In addition, the database can include data for structures, such as bridges, buildings, entire towns or other significant features that you want to visualize with the software.

Optional plug-ins can do things such as render threats such as the radar coverage area at an enemy missile site. In fact, the French Air Force has bought the entire package of base software and all plug-ins, worth some €16,000, to plan their helicopter training missions. The result is that French pilots can "fly" their entire mission from a PC before they so much as set foot on a flight line, and "see" what they will be facing during the mission.

Other applications include national and regional infrastructure development (urban planning, highways, powerlines and such), telecommunications (planning for GSM coverage zones), theatre of conflict simulations and air route definitions. That last capability is being used by some airlines to allow their pilots to clearly and accurately visualize the approaches into unfamiliar airports, without having to fire up an expensive simulator.

What is most surprising about the application is its reasonable list of minimum hardware requirements: a Pentium III or Athlon 800+ mhz processor, 256 megabytes of RAM, 10 gigabytes of free hard disk space, an Open-GL compatible accelerated video card such as the GEForce 2, and either Windows NT version 4 or Windows 2000.

FMI: www.virtual-geo.com, virtualgeo@c-s.fr

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