Claims
- 1. Apparatus for detecting glass breaking from an impact; said apparatus comprising:
- a wide-band transducer for converting sound and pressure waves, characteristic of the impact, glass flexing and glass shattering, into electrical signals;
- a low-frequency channel including a low frequency band-pass filter and a threshold detector for detecting signals from the transducer characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact;
- a high-frequency channel including a high frequency band-pass filter and a threshold detector for detecting signals from the transducer characteristic of a) sound of the impact and b) the glass shattering;
- a timing-signal generator monitoring said low and high frequency channels and responsive to the detection of said low and high frequency signals for determining first and second time intervals, said first time interval beginning with detection of the sound of the impact and continuing through the flexing and the shattering of the glass, the second time interval beginning after the flexing of the glass and continuing through the shattering of the glass;
- means for analyzing the detected high frequency signals based on a sum of pulse widths over said first time interval and individual pulse widths over said second time interval; and,
- means for issuing an alarm signal only when: a) said low frequency signals are first detected not before said detection of said high frequency signals; and b) said sum of pulse widths is less than a predetermined value indicative of the sound of the impact followed by the glass shattering, and the individual pulse widths are less than a predetermined value indicative of the glass shattering.
- 2. The invention of claim 1, wherein said analyzing means determines pulse widths defined by the time interval beginning when a signal once crosses a predetermined threshold in one direction until said signal next crosses said threshold in an opposite direction.
- 3. The invention of claim 2, wherein said analyzing means includes pulse-width threshold detectors and integrators arranged to remove pulse widths less than thirty seven microseconds and thereafter to identify a) any individual pulse width less than approximately one millisecond, and c) summed pulse widths less than approximately seven milliseconds.
- 4. Apparatus for detecting glass breaking from an impact; said apparatus comprising:
- means for detecting a sequence of low frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact and high frequencies characteristic of a) sound of the impact and b) shattering of the glass;
- means for qualifying the detected low frequencies only when: a) said detected low frequencies are first detected in said sequence not before said high frequencies are first detected and within approximately two milliseconds after said first detection of said high frequencies; and b) said detection of said low frequencies continues for a minimum predetermined duration; and,
- means for issuing an alarm signal only when: a) said low frequencies are qualified; and, b) said high frequencies after said low frequency qualification are characteristic of the glass shattering.
- 5. A glass break detector for detecting glass breaking from an impact, said detector comprising:
- a broad band transducer for converting atmospheric waves into electrical signals;
- a detector of high frequencies in said electrical signals characteristic of sound from the impact;
- a detector of low frequencies in said electrical signal characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact; and,
- means for accepting a sequence of said high and low frequencies as being characteristic of a glass breaking event only when said sequence begins with said high frequencies in the absence of said low frequencies.
- 6. A glass break detector comprising:
- means for detecting high frequencies characteristic of sound of the impact and the glass shattering;
- means for detecting low frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact; and,
- means for detecting a sequence a) beginning with said high frequencies characteristic of the sound of the impact, b) followed by said low frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing, and c) ending with said high frequencies characteristic of the glass shattering, said last mentioned means issuing an alarm signal in response to detection of said sequence.
- 7. Apparatus for detecting glass breaking from an impact; said apparatus comprising:
- a transducer for converting sound and pressure waves into electrical signals;
- means for detecting a sequence of low frequency signals from the transducer characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact and high frequency signals from the transducer characteristic of a) sound of the impact and b) the glass shattering;
- means for qualifying the detected low frequency signals only when said low frequency signals are first detected in said sequence within a time window beginning after the first detection of said high frequency signals;
- means for analyzing the detected high frequency signals based on individual and summed pulse widths; and,
- means for issuing an alarm signal only: a) after qualification of said low frequency signals; b) when said summed pulse widths are less than a predetermined value, indicative of the sound of the impact and the glass shattering and c) the individual pulse widths are less than a predetermined value indicative of the glass shattering.
- 8. A method of detecting glass breaking from an impact; said method comprising:
- monitoring high frequencies characteristic of the impact sound and generating a timing signal beginning with the detection of the impact frequencies;
- monitoring low frequencies characteristic of glass flexing from the impact;
- monitoring high frequencies characteristic of the glass shattering; and,
- issuing an alarm only when: a) the flexing frequencies are detected beginning within two milliseconds after the first detection of said impact frequencies, b) the flexing frequencies are detected continuously over a period of at least one millisecond, and c) the individual pulse widths of the shattering frequencies all are less than approximately one microseconds.
- 9. Apparatus for detecting a glass breaking event caused by an impact; said apparatus comprising:
- means for detecting low frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact, and high frequencies characteristic of sound of the impact; and,
- means for rejecting the detected low frequencies, when the low frequencies are detected beginning before the high frequencies are first detected.
- 10. The invention of claim 9, wherein said detected low frequencies are accepted as part of the glass breaking event when said low frequencies last for a predetermined minimum duration beginning in a time window that opens not before the first detection of said high frequencies and closes before approximately two milliseconds after said high frequencies are first detected.
- 11. The invention of claim 10, wherein said time window opens at approximately one hundred and twenty microseconds after the first detection of the high frequencies.
- 12. Apparatus for detecting glass breaking from an impact; said apparatus comprising:
- means for detecting a sequence of low frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact and high frequencies characteristic of a) sound of the impact and b) shattering of the glass;
- means for analyzing said detected high frequencies based on individual pulse widths indicative of the sound of the impact and the shattering of the glass; and,
- means for issuing an alarm signal only when: a) said detected low frequencies are qualified by lasting for at least one millisecond beginning from their first detection in said sequence not before said detection of said high frequencies; and, b) after detection of said low frequencies, said individual pulse widths of said high frequencies all are less than one and one half milliseconds.
- 13. The invention of claim 12, wherein said first detection of said detected low frequencies occurs in a time window that opens after first detection of said high frequencies and closes within two milliseconds after the first detection of said high frequencies.
- 14. The invention of claim 13, wherein said analyzing means further analyzes said high frequencies based the sum of the pulse widths for a period of approximately thirty five milliseconds, and issues said alarm signal only when said sum during said period is less than a predetermined amount characteristic of an impact sound and glass shattering.
- 15. A glass break detector comprising:
- a high frequency channel including an amplifier and threshold device detecting frequencies characteristic of sound of the impact;
- a low frequency channel including an amplifier and threshold device detecting frequencies characteristic of the glass flexing from the impact; and,
- a controller detecting glass breaking based on a sequence beginning with said impact frequencies absent said flexing frequencies.
- 16. The invention of claim 15, wherein said flexing frequencies are rejected unless said flexing frequencies last for a predetermined minimum duration beginning not before first detection of said high frequencies.
- 17. The invention of claim 16, wherein said flexing frequencies are rejected unless said flexing frequencies begin in a time window that opens at approximately one hundred and twenty microseconds after first detection of said high frequencies and closes before approximately two milliseconds after said first detection of said high frequencies.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a divisional of my U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/225,116, filed Apr. 8, 1994, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,450,061 entitled Glass Break Detection Using Temporal Sequence of Selecteed Frequency Characteristics.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
225116 |
Apr 1994 |
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