This invention relates to a method of capturing full spectrum color images in an electronic color camera using a Full-Spectrum Pixel Sensor Color Analyzer.
The human vision system has evolved based on an environment for processing information that exists only in nature under continuous full spectrum ambient lighting conditions. Relatively recently, during the past 400 years, we have exposed our vision systems to unusual new requirements. The reading of printed text and pictures in artificial light, and screened photographs, television and computer displays having colors restricted fundamentally to three to five color primaries.
Most film, video, digital cameras and display systems are based upon the three-color, metameric theory of spectral capture, using Red Green Blue (RGB) or Cyan Magenta Yellow (CMY) primaries. Hence, the camera's spectral range or gamut is limited by the selected color primaries supported by the sensors and camera system. The color gamut following these tri-stimulus parameters does not match the enormous spectral range of the human visual system. There is no way such conventional systems can replicate what a human can see in the field, where the human visual system is capable of a color palette which cannot be physically displayed by only three to five primary lights. Futhermore, these systems are inflexible, based on a mythical “standard” human observer, and cannot be readily adjusted for human diversity or handicaps. Four or five primaries are sometimes used for ink on paper or special displays, which expands the gamut somewhat, but still cannot reproduce all of the colors that humans can see.
This invention comprises the means for the capture of full spectrum images in an electronic camera without the use of color primary filters to limit the spectral color gamut of the captured image. The fundamental principle of the invention is that each pixel of the image sensor acts as an independent spectrophotometer and spectrum analyzer.
The foregoing features of the invention will be more readily understood by reference to the following detailed description, taken with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Definitions. As used in this description and the accompanying claims, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated, unless the context otherwise requires.
Spectrophotometer includes any device that resolves the various regions of electromagnetic light spectrum into discrete components, through the mechanism of dispersion, and measures the radiance of these discrete components.
Diffraction grating spectrophotometer is a device that uses a diffraction grating as its dispersive mechanism.
Spectrum analyzer is an instrument that measures the irradiance energy distribution with frequency for electromagnetic waveforms, capturing their relative spacing and amplitudes over a designated bandwidth.
This invention comprises the means for the capture of full spectrum images in an electronic camera without the use of color primary filters to limit the spectral color gamut of the captured image. The fundamental principle of the invention is that each pixel of the image sensor acts as an independent spectrophotometer, spectral region separator, and spectrum analyzer. By using a diffraction grating to disperse the spectrum, this invention, compared to a spectrum dispersed by a prism, yields:
Referring to
In a second embodiment of the invention, the photodetector line array 16 may be constructed out of any electrically photosensitive device capable of being segmented, such as a CCD photodiode.
Referring to
Referring to
To create a two-dimensional image, the array 34 of spectrometers are scanned using switcher 35, pixel by pixel, line by line for a full frame. Frames are sequenced to capture full-spectrum motion images.
The present application claims priority from provisional application 60/454,555, filed Mar. 14, 2003. This related application is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60454555 | Mar 2003 | US |