Difference between revisions of "Lighthouse"

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==Non-VR Applications of Lighthouse==
 
==Non-VR Applications of Lighthouse==
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==History and Miscellaneous==
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The chief architect of the Lighthouse tracking system is [[Alan Yates]].
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One of the predecessors to Lighthouse is to plaster the room with QR codes.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 07:37, 26 May 2015

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Lighthouse is a positional tracking system developed by Valve for SteamVR. It accurately tracks the position and orientation of the user's head-mounted Display and controllers in real time. Lighthouse enables the users to move anywhere and re-orient themselves in any position within the range of the SteamVR Base Stations. It is a key technology that enables SteamVR to create the first holodeck or full-room experience in Virtual Reality.

Valve plans to make Lighthouse freely available to all hardware manufactures.

How Does It Work?

Central to the Lighthouse technology are the Base Stations, small rectangular objects placed in the room. They serve as reference points for any positionally tracked devices such as the HMDs and controllers. Base Stations perform this function by flooding the room with a non-visible light, the receptors on the tracked devices would intercept the light and figure out where they are in relation to the Base Stations. Multiple Base Stations (2 for SteamVR) allow the tracked devices to figure out where they are in the 3D space.

Each Base Station contains an IR beacon called Sync Blinker and 2 laser emitters that spin rapidly. 60 times per second, the Sync Blinker would emit a synchronization pulse and 1 of the 2 spinning lasers would sweep a beam across the room. The receptors, HMDs and controllers, are covered with photosensors that recognizes the synchronization pulse and the laser beams. When it detects a synchronization pulse, the receptor starts to count til one of its photosensors is hit by the laser beam. Lighthouse calculates When the photosensor is hit by the laser and Where that photosensor is located to find the exact position of the receptor in relation to the Base Station. When there are 2 Base Stations, the position and the orientation of the receptors in the 3D space of the room is established.

Non-VR Applications of Lighthouse

History and Miscellaneous

The chief architect of the Lighthouse tracking system is Alan Yates.

One of the predecessors to Lighthouse is to plaster the room with QR codes.

References