The present invention relates generally to cameras, and more particularly to an apparatus and method for alerting the camera user of possible lens contamination before a picture is taken.
Camera lens contamination is a common problem, and may be caused by such factors as dust, dirt, fingerprints, and moisture. Camera users typically address lens contamination in two ways; by reducing its occurrence through careful handling of the camera and its lens, and by periodically inspecting the lens and cleaning it if it becomes contaminated.
To reduce the occurrence of lens contamination and protect the lens, a lens cover may be used. The cover may be removable, as in the case of a lens cap, or it may be integrated into the camera such that it is opened to permit picture-taking and is closed at other times to protect the lens. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,247,855 B1, to Motohashi et al., discloses a lens protecting cover-attached camera where a moving mechanism allows the lens cover to rotate from a closed position to an open position while remaining attached to the camera.
A lens cover, however, does not completely prevent lens contamination. Also, users may not notice lens contamination until it has already caused degradation in picture quality.
In one embodiment the invention may include a camera with a lens comprising a lens contamination detection system.
In another embodiment the invention may include a camera lens contamination sensing system comprising: means for sensing the intensity of light impinged thereon; and means for illuminating a camera lens with testing light such that little or no testing light reaches the means for sensing when the lens is free of contamination, and such that a sensible amount of testing light is scatteredly reflected by the contamination onto the means for sensing when the lens is contaminated.
In another embodiment the invention may include a method of detecting contamination of a lens comprising: directing testing light onto the lens at an orientation such that virtually none of the testing light which impinges on the lens will be directed to a sensing station when the lens is free of contamination but such that a sensible amount of the testing light which impinges on the lens will be directed to the sensing station when the lens is contaminated; and sensing the testing light which reaches the testing station and generating a sensing signal representative thereof.
One embodiment of a camera lens contamination detection system and method is illustrated herein through the use of a digital camera which is not of the single lens reflex (SLR) type, but rather has a separate viewfinder. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that a lens contamination system is equally applicable to digital SLR camera and may also be extended to photographic film cameras through the use of an electronic image sensor which may be contained, for example, in the mirror of an SLR or the lower interior sidewall of a camera barrel. Thus, the example illustrated herein to teach the principles of a lens contamination detection system is not to be taken as limiting the detection system to any particular type of camera.
Referring first to
Referring next to
An aperture 48 is located between the second lens element 44 and the third lens element 46. The aperture 48 is controlled to admit more or less light into the camera. Light which enters the digital camera 20 through the first lens element 42 passes consecutively through the second lens element 44, the aperture 48, and the third lens element 46, with the passage of light then being directed through a shutter 50 and onto an electronic image sensor 52. The shutter 50 controls the time interval during which light from an object to be photographed is allowed to impinge on the electronic image sensor 52.
The front exterior surface of the first lens element 42 is located nearest to cap 36. The first lens element 42, the second lens element 44, the third lens element 46, the aperture 48, and the shutter 50 may all be components known in the art.
The light-absorbent material segment 40 may be adhesively secured to the inside of the lens cap 36. It may be made of material which absorbs substantially all of the light which is directed thereupon, and thus will reflect substantially no light back onto the lens. Material segment 40 may be, for example, a flat black disc having a fine texture which is highly resistant to smudging. Alternately, instead of using a disc for the light-absorbent material segment 40, the inside of the lens cap could be manufactured with a non-reflective flat black finish or may employ other light absorbing material. Alternative locations for the LEDs are shown in FIG. 2. In a first embodiment, one or more LEDs 38 are located at 54 between the first lens element 42 and the second lens element 44, with the LEDs 38 oriented to direct light toward the first lens element 42 as shown in more detail in FIG. 2A.
In this first embodiment, again referring to
In this embodiment, substantially all of the light emitted from the LEDs 38, located at 54, will pass through the first lens element 42 so long as it is clean and free from contamination and scratches. However, in the event of contamination 58 existing on the outer surface of the first lens element 42, some of the light emitted from the LEDs 38 will be scatteredly reflected by the contamination back in a direction generally toward the electronic image sensor 52. This backscattering will ultimately result in some of the light passing through the second lens element 44, the aperture 48, and the third lens element 46, and the shutter 50 and onto the electronic image sensor 52, where it may be detected.
However, that portion of light which is directed onto the area of contamination 58 is at least partially backscattered by the contamination 58. At least a portion of the backscattered light, e.g. ray 53, is directed onto the electronic image sensor 52, where it may be detected. The lens cap 36 when mounted on the lens barrel 24, prevents external light from reaching the electronic image sensor 52 during the contamination detection process. Thus, if no contamination were present and the lens cap were on, virtually no light would strike sensor 52 during the period that LEDs 38 are illuminated.
In another embodiment illustrated in phantom in
Referring back to
In this embodiment, most of the light emitted from LEDs 38a (only one shown in
However, that portion of light which is directed obliquely onto the area of the first lens element 42 containing contamination 158 is at least partially scattered by the contamination 158, e.g. ray 155, and is directed onto the electronic image sensor 52 where it may be detected. (Again, when the lens cap 36 is mounted on the lens barrel 24 virtually no external light reaches the electronic image sensor 52 during the contamination detection process. Thus, essentially all of the light detected is light, e.g. 155, from LEDs 38a which is reflected by contamination 158 onto the sensor 52.) Suitable alternative structure, such as a peripheral sensor of the type shown in
Referring next to
Also shown in the digital camera 20 are the aperture 48, the shutter 50, and the electronic image sensor 52. The operation of the digital camera 20 is controlled by a microprocessor 60, which can store and retrieve data from both a conventional memory 62 and a nonvolatile flash memory 64. The electronic image sensor 52 is connected to supply image information to the microprocessor 60. The microprocessor 60 may operate a lens focus and zoom mechanism 66 which controls the focusing and zooming of the elements of the lens 26. The operation of a lens focus and zoom mechanism 66 is known to those skilled in the art.
The microprocessor 60 may also operate an aperture drive 68 which controls the aperture 48, and a shutter drive 70 which controls the shutter 50. The operation of such drives is known in the art. The digital camera 20 may have electrical power supplied by batteries 72 and an AC adapter (not shown) which supplies electrical power through an external “power in” jack 74 contained in the digital camera 20.
The digital camera 20 may contain an LCD display 76 which is driven by the microprocessor 60. The operation of the digital camera 20 may be controlled by a shutter button 32 (which controls the taking of a picture and, optionally, may also be used to turn the camera on and off), a zoom control switch 34 (which is used to control the zoom function of the lens 26), and a multifunction camera control switch 82 (which may be used to select operations displayed on the LCD display 76). The LCD display 76, the shutter button 32, the zoom control switch 34, and the camera control switch 82 may all be mounted in the camera body 22.
Connectivity may be provided to the digital camera 20 through a USB port 84, an IR port 86, and a memory slot card 88, each of which is connected to the microprocessor 60. The USB port 84, the IR port 86, and the memory card slot 88 may all be mounted in the camera body 22. A removable memory card 90 may be installed in the memory card slot 88 to allow digital images captured by the digital camera 20 to be stored therein. A speaker 92 may be used to supply sound signals to the user of the digital camera 20, and is also mounted in the camera body 22 and is driven by the microprocessor 60.
The LED's 38 or 38a are driven by the microprocessor 60 and operate as described above. Either LED configuration or both may be employed. A lens contamination light 94 (also referred to herein as a “clean lens” light 94) is also driven by the microprocessor 60, and may be located in the viewfinder 28 to provide a visual warning signal to the user of the digital camera 20 that the lens 26 has contamination located thereon, and should be cleaned prior to taking a picture. If desired, an audible alarm can also be provided using the speaker 92.
Referring now to
The next process is an open aperture step 104 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will activate the aperture drive 60 to open the aperture to the maximum opening (f-stop).
The process then moves to a turn on LED step 106 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will turn on the LEDs 38/38a to cause them to illuminate the first lens element 42. Next, the process moves to an activate shutter step 108 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will cause the shutter drive 70 to open the shutter mechanism 50 to allow any light from LEDs 38/38a which is scattered through the lens system by contamination on the first lens element 42 to reach the electronic image sensor 52.
The process then moves to a store image from sensor step 110 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will temporarily store the image from the electronic image sensor 52, typically in the memory 62 (shown in FIG. 3). Next, the process moves to a compare image to baseline image step 112 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will compare the stored image with a baseline image, which is typically stored in the nonvolatile flash memory 64 (shown in FIG. 3).
The process next moves to a lens cap off determination step 114 in which the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will check to see if the test result indicates that the lens cap 36 is on or off. If the comparison indicates a difference of sufficiently large magnitude to indicate that ambient light has reached the image sensor 52 the system assumes that the lens cap was off during the test. If this occurs, the test is treated as invalid, and no ultimate determination is reached, and hence no alarm is provided. In this case, the process will move to a lens contamination detection termination step 116, and the process will end.
If, on the other hand, in the lens cap off determination step 114 the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) determines that the magnitude of the difference between the stored image and the baseline image is not sufficiently large to indicate that the lens cap 36 was removed, the process will move to an image within range determination 118.
In the image within range determination 118, the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will check to see if the test result indicates that the first lens element 42 (shown in
If, on the other hand, the comparison indicates a difference of a predetermined sensed magnitude (but less than the magnitude associated with a cap off condition), this means that there was a significant amount of scattered light from the LED's 38 (shown in
In one alternative embodiment a lens cap off determination step 101 may be performed immediately after start 100 in lieu of step 114. In this step 101 the digital camera 20 (as controlled by the microprocessor 60) will check a physical sensor (such as for example a plunger sensor, not shown) mounted on the camera barrel to determine if lens cap 36 is on or off. If lens cap 36 is off, lens contamination detection cannot be performed so the process moves to termination step 116 and the process ends. If on the other hand the lens cap is on, the process moves to an open aperture operation.
Referring finally to
The histogram of
It may be desirable to provide for recalibration of the camera lens contamination detection system. This may be accomplished using the operating system of the digital camera 20. In this situation, the baseline image information may be modified to compensate for aging of the camera or permanent damage to the lens such as small scratches which, unlike lens contamination, cannot be removed by merely cleaning the lens. In this situation, the menu would instruct the user to clean the first lens element 42 (shown in
Another way of implementing the comparison test would be to simply generate a numerical value based upon the cumulative light intensity indicated by the sensor during the current testing period and then generate an alarm if the numerical value is within a predetermined range representative of a contaminated lens. That range could be determined through empirical methods performed on similar cameras or the same camera. The upper limit of the range would take into account a lens off condition.
It will be appreciated that the above detailed description teaches a detecting and indicating system and method which detects possible lens contamination and alerts the digital camera user of this lens contamination before a picture is taken. The camera lens contamination detection system may be calibrated to detect any desired level of contamination which is perceived by the designer to cause picture quality degradation. The detection and indication system may perform the detection and indication functions whenever the digital camera is first turned on, so that a check for contamination on the lens may be made prior to each time the camera is to be used. Alternatively the detection function may be implemented in a manner such that it is selectable or overrideable by the camera user.
The camera lens contamination detection system and method of the present invention provide an indication to the user which may be placed in a prominent location on the camera e.g. within the viewfinder, so that it is highly visible, and/or an audible alarm may be provided to draw the user's attention to the contaminated lens.
The camera lens contamination detection system may be built into the camera, and may be digitally implemented to function completely automatically, without requiring any input from the camera user. The camera lens contamination detection system may include the ability to compensate for the camera getting older, as well as for any scratches or other permanent damage which occur to the lens which could otherwise cause a less sophisticated system or method to produce false indications of lens contamination upon each use thereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3988068 | Sprague | Oct 1976 | A |
5627638 | Vokhmin | May 1997 | A |
6272259 | Mizoguchi | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6791608 | Miyazawa | Sep 2004 | B1 |
20020093577 | Kitawaki et al. | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20030133027 | Itoh | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20030193604 | Robins et al. | Oct 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
05087739 | Apr 1993 | JP |
2001119614 | Apr 2001 | JP |
2001215170 | Aug 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030193604 A1 | Oct 2003 | US |