The disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. JP2010-219824 filed on Sep. 29, 2010 including the specification, drawings, claims and abstract is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a color camera which obtains color video images using an imaging device, the color camera being configured to be able to switch between bright-light shooting (daylight photographing) and low-light shooting (nighttime photographing) with an infrared cut filter placed on an optical path.
2. Description of the Related Art
An imaging device such as a CCD used for a color camera has sensitivity to the visible to infrared region. This presents a problem in that during bright-light shooting, image color reproducibility is adversely affected by infrared radiation contained in image light from a subject (resulting in unnatural coloration). To solve this problem, an infrared cut filter is placed in front of the imaging device in a typical color camera. However, the infrared cut filter, which impairs night vision, gets in the way of low-light shooting. In the case of a vehicle-mounted color camera, for example, when the vehicle moves backward in the nighttime, the camera captures the field of view behind the vehicle illuminated by back-up lights and displays the view on a monitor. Tungsten lamps of the back-up lights have light emission characteristics which show high intensity in the infrared region, and if the color camera is fitted with an infrared cut filter, the infrared region is cut off, darkening video images displayed on the display screen and degrading visibility in the field of view behind the vehicle. Thus, to enable both bright-light shooting and low-light shooting, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2005-109630 discloses a technique which, by installing a mechanism adapted to mechanically slide an infrared cut filter in and out of an optical path, places the infrared cut filter on the optical path for bright-light shooting and retracts the infrared cut filter from the optical path for low-light shooting.
The technique disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2005-109630 requires a space for use to slide the infrared cut filter in and out of the optical path. When the infrared cut filter is slid in and out of the optical path to switch between bright-light shooting and low-light shooting during shooting of moving images, there is a problem in that edges of the infrared cut filter may pass the optical path and thereby appear in video images.
Therefore, to prevent the edges from appearing in the video images, it is necessary to stop shooting once before sliding the infrared cut filter in or out of the optical path.
The present invention has been made in view of the above circumstances and has an object to provide a color camera which can switch between bright-light shooting and low-light shooting with an infrared cut filter placed on an optical path.
A color camera according to the present invention comprises: an optical system adapted to focus image light from a subject; an imaging device having sensitivity to at least the visible to near-infrared region and adapted to project an image focused by the optical system and thereby generate a video signal; a multilayer infrared cut filter placed at any location on an optical path running from the subject to the imaging device, with a cutoff wavelength being set in the vicinity of a boundary between the visible region and the near-infrared region, and adapted to allow passage of the near-infrared region close to the boundary with the visible region when an incident angle is small and shift the cutoff wavelength toward shorter wavelengths with increases in the incident angle to decrease passage of the near-infrared region; an incident angle varying mechanism adapted to vary the incident angle of the image light from the subject with respect to the multilayer infrared cut filter; and a drive unit adapted to drive the incident angle varying mechanism according to the amount of light on the subject by an operator's operation or automatically and thereby decrease the incident angle when an amount of light on the subject is small or increase the incident angle when the amount of light on the subject is large. Being configured to change the cutoff wavelength of the multilayer infrared cut filter by varying the incident angle of the image light from the subject with respect to the multilayer infrared cut filter according to the amount of light on the subject using a property of the multilayer infrared cut filter whose cutoff wavelength changes with the incident angle (incident-angle dependence), the present invention can switch between bright-light shooting and low-light shooting without the need to slide the infrared cut filter in and out of the optical path.
Incidentally, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 6-281813 discloses a transmission wavelength varying apparatus which can vary a transmission wavelength by varying an incident angle of a multilayer film filter. Also, Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2000-206325 discloses a technique for adjusting an incident angle of a multilayer infrared cut filter and thereby finely adjusting a cutoff wavelength of the multilayer infrared cut filter after formation of a multilayer film. These techniques utilize incident-angle dependence of the multilayer film filter, but do not give any suggestion about using the incident-angle dependence for switching a color camera between bright-light shooting mode and low-light shooting mode.
A first embodiment of a color camera according to the present invention is shown in
The infrared cut filter 18 is constructed by forming a multilayer dielectric film on a surface of a transparent substrate. The infrared cut filter 18 has a cutoff wavelength near a boundary between the visible region and near-infrared region. Besides, the material, film thickness, and number of layers of multilayer film are set so as to have a high incident-angle dependence. An angle of the infrared cut filter 18 with respect to an optical axis 23 of the optical system 16 (an incident angle of the image light 14 from the subject 12 with respect to the infrared cut filter 18) is varied by an incident angle varying mechanism 22, shifting the cutoff wavelength with respect to the image light 14 from the subject 12. That is, when the incident angle is small (when the optical axis 23 intersects a plane of the infrared cut filter 18 at right angles or nearly right angles), the cutoff wavelength shifts toward longer wavelengths to allow passage of the near-infrared region close to the boundary with the visible region. The cutoff wavelength shifts toward shorter wavelengths with increases in the incident angle to decrease passage of the near-infrared region.
A drive unit 24 automatically drives the incident angle varying mechanism 22 according to the amount of light on the subject 12. That is, an electric drive source 25 of the drive unit 24 varies the incident angle of the infrared cut filter 18 by electrically driving the incident angle varying mechanism 22. A light level detector 26 detects the amount of light on the subject 12 based on the video signal outputted from the imaging device 20. A control unit 28 operates the electric drive source 25 according to the detected amount of light and thereby controls the incident angle of the infrared cut filter 18 by switching between two values. Specifically, when the detected amount of light is small (in the case of low-light shooting), the control unit 28 decreases the incident angle by shifting the cutoff wavelength toward longer wavelengths, and when the detected amount of light is large (in the case of bright-light shooting), the control unit 28 increases the incident angle by shifting the cutoff wavelength toward shorter wavelengths. Consequently, when the amount of light on the subject 12 is small (in the case of low-light shooting), the infrared cut filter 18 allows passage of the near-infrared region close to the boundary with the visible region and thereby improves night vision. When the amount of light on the subject 12 is large (in the case of bright-light shooting), the infrared cut filter 18 cuts off the near-infrared region or decreases passage of the near-infrared region and thereby improves color reproducibility. This enables both bright-light shooting and low-light shooting. Incidentally, although according to the above description, the amount of light is detected using a video signal, a photosensor may be installed separately as a light level detector to detect the amount of light.
A configuration example of the electric drive source 25 and incident angle varying mechanism 22 in
A configuration example of the multilayer film of the infrared cut filter 18 in
A second embodiment of the present invention is shown in
A configuration example of the control lever 42 and incident angle varying mechanism 22 in
A third embodiment of the present invention is shown in
In the embodiments described above, the infrared cut filter 18 is placed behind the optical system 16, but the infrared cut filter 18 may be placed in front of or in the optical system alternatively.
Although in the embodiments described above, the incident angle of the infrared cut filter is switched between two values according to the amount of light on the subject, the incident angle may be switched among multiple steps or varied steplessly according to the amount of light on the subject.
The color camera according to the present invention can be used, for example, for the following applications.
Vehicle-mounted video camera which displays video images around the vehicle (e.g., behind the vehicle) on a vehicle-mounted display screen
Surveillance video camera
Camcorder
Digital camera
Other movie cameras and still cameras
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2010-219824 | Sep 2010 | JP | national |