The present invention relates to the field of lighting devices and, more specifically, to converting a non-optimized lighting source signal to utilize a high efficacy light emitting semiconductor.
Some lighting devices are generally capable of emitting light within virtually any color range. This diversity of color emitted may be accomplished via a combination of various colored primary light sources emitting light at varying luminosities. Commonly, in devices that combine light to create various colors, the primary light sources include red, blue, and green colored light.
Red, green, and blue are traditionally known as primary additive colors, or primaries. Additional colors may be created though the combination of the primaries. By combining two additive colors in substantially equal quantities, the secondary colors of cyan, magenta, and yellow may be created. Combing all three primary colors may produce white. By varying the luminosity of each color emitted, approximately the full color gamut may be produced.
In systems using three primary colors to control the luminosity of the emitted light, the brightness of the emitted colored light may be controlled by altering the brightness of the primaries corresponding to the output color desired. If a white output color is desired, all primaries would be required to emit light at full luminosity. In a lighting system that utilizes LEDs to emit light, operating every LED at full luminosity may require using an undesirably large amount of energy and may produce and excessive amount of heat. Therefore, there exists a need for an efficient system to emit light of virtually any color included within the full color gamut without the inefficient operation characteristics of the prior art.
In attempts to satisfy this need for the efficient emission of colored light, inventions in the prior art have disclosed adding a white light source to supplement the primary color light sources. By including an additional white light source, the white light may provide additional brightness without requiring the primary light sources to operate at full luminosity. However, most lighting source signals do not contemplate the inclusion of a white light source, resulting in signals that cannot drive the white light source of the modified lighting device.
Previous disclosures have described methods of estimating a white input signal from an RGB (red-green-blue) input signal by using various methods. U.S. Patent Application Publication 2007/0157492 to Lo et al. discloses approximating a white value by comparing grayscale values of the primaries. However, the approximation disclosed in the Lo et al. '492 publication requires discarding luminosity values, resulting in potentially inaccurate results.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,728,846 to Higgins et al. discloses converting an RGB signal to an RGBW (red-green-blue-white) through complex matrices and algorithms. However, the Higgins et al. '846 patent outputs a signal that drives a white light source in addition to the primaries, requiring the operation of a large number of power consuming elements than before conversion of the signal may occur.
The proposed solutions included in the prior art that create a signal to drive a white light source commonly drive the white light source in addition to the preexisting primaries. By adding a new lighting source, the proposed solutions of the prior art may not operate with optimal efficiency characteristics. Additionally, the solutions proposed in the prior art contemplate converting an RGB into an RGBW signal. As a result, any additional input signal formats, such as the commonly used xyY color space, must first undergo conversion operations which may be computationally intensive and wasteful of energy. Furthermore, the disclosures in the prior art require the use of light sources defined within the full color gamut to reproduce light in various colors, contributing to inefficient operation of the devices included in the prior art.
There exists a need for a lighting signal converter that may accept a source signal capable of defining a colored light in a two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space that includes the full color gamut, such as the xyY color space, and produce an output signal that is defined in a three dimensional color space defined by a subset gamut of the full color gamut. There further exists a need for a lighting signal converter that outputs a signal to efficiently drive a minimal number of primary light sources along with a high efficacy light source.
With the foregoing in mind, it is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a lighting signal converter that may advantageously accept a source signal that defines a colored light in a two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space which includes the full color gamut. More specifically, the present invention may advantageously accept a source input defined by the xyY color space. The present invention may also advantageously produce an output signal that is defined in the three dimensional color space defined by a subset gamut of the full color gamut. The present invention may further output a signal to efficiently drive a minimal number of primary light sources along with a high efficacy light source, advantageously reducing power consumption and heat generation.
These and other objects, features, and advantages according to the presenting invention are provided by a lighting device for directing source light within a predetermined source wavelength range in a desired output direction that may include a high efficacy lighting signal converter. The high efficacy lighting signal converter may include a signal adapting chromacity system to control a lighting device. The system may further include a signal conversion engine that receives a source signal designating a color of light defined by a two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space and converts the source signal to a three dimensional color space defined within a subset gamut of a full color gamut. The subset gamut may include a first color light, a second color light and a high efficacy light.
The signal conversion engine may perform a conversion operation to convert the source signal to an output signal, and uses the output signal to drive light emitting diodes (LEDs). The first color light and the second color light are emitted by colored LEDs, and wherein the high efficacy light is emitted by a high efficacy LED. A conversion coating may be applied to the colored LEDs to convert a source light wavelength range into a converted light wavelength range.
The two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space may be a xyY color space. Additionally, the three dimensional color space defined within the full color gamut may be a RGBW color space. The three dimensional color space defined within the subset gamut may be one of a RGW color space, GBW color space, or RBW color space.
The first color light and the second color light are selected from a group comprising a red light, a blue light, and a green light, and wherein the high efficacy light is a white light. The high efficacy light is defined by a color temperature between 2000K and 10000K.
The conversion operation may convert the source signal to the output signal by performing a matrix conversion operation. In the matrix conversion operation, the matrices may be defined for the two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space included in the source signal. The matrices may then be inverted to define inverse matrices that are processed to define a scalar including scalar values that are positive and included in the output signal. The output signal may define the color of the light in the three dimensional color space defined within the subset gamut.
A method aspect of the present invention is for a conversion operation. The conversion operation may convert the source signal to the output signal by performing a matrix conversion operation. In the matrix conversion operation, the matrices may be defined for the two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space included in the source signal. The matrices may then be inverted to define inverse matrices that are processed to define a scalar including scalar values that are positive and included in the output signal. The output signal may define the color of the light in the three dimensional color space defined within the subset gamut. The matrices that are defined as non-square matrices may undergo square matrix preconditioning.
The conversion operation may convert the source signal to the output signal by performing an angular conversion operation. In the angular conversion operation, the three dimensional color space defined by the subset gamut is divided from the full color gamut by using angular determination. The subset gamut may include an origin that includes the high efficacy light and primaries that include colored light. The primaries may be defined in the subset gamut including a first subset primary relative to the first color light and a second subset primary relative to the second color light. A subset gamut angular range may be included between a first primary angle relative to the first subset primary and a second primary angle relative to the second primary angle.
The three dimensional color space included in the subset gamut may be triangularly located between the origin, the first subset primary, and the second subset primary. The color of the light defined by the two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space may be plotted in the three dimensional color space of the full color gamut. Additionally, the three dimensional color space defined by the subset gamut relative to the color of the light, the color angle being located between the first primary angle and the second primary angle.
A first primary angular range may be included between the first primary angle and the color angle. Similarly, a second primary angular range is included between the second primary angle and the color angle. The first primary angular range may be compared to the second primary angular range to determine a first primary angular ratio proportional to a first portion of the subset gamut angular range comprised of the first primary angular range. The first primary angular ratio may determine a luminosity of the first subset primary included in the output signal.
Similarly, the second primary angular range may be compared to the first primary angular range to determine a second primary angular ratio proportional to a second portion of the subset gamut angular range comprised of the second primary angular range. The second primary angular ratio may determine the luminosity of the second subset primary included in the output signal. The first subset primary and second subset primary may be analyzed to determine the luminosity of the high efficacy light included in the output signal.
The conversion operation may convert the source signal to the output signal by performing a linear conversion operation. In the linear conversion, the three dimensional color space defined by the subset gamut is divided from the full color gamut to include an origin that includes the high efficacy light and primaries that include colored light. The primaries may be defined in the subset gamuts including a first subset primary relative to the first color light and a second subset primary relative to the second color light. A color point may be defined by plotting the color of the light as defined within the two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space in the three dimensional color space of the full color gamut.
Lines may be defined relative to the two spatial plus luminance dimensional color space. The lines may include a first primary line defined between the origin and the first subset primary and a second primary line defined between the origin and the second subset primary. The lines may also include a color line defined between origin and the color point including a slope and an axial intercept, and a subset gamut line that intersects the first primary line, the second primary line, and the color point.
The axial intercept may be located at the origin. The subset gamut line may interest the first primary line at a first primary intersection distance from the origin The subset gamut line may intersect the second primary line at a second primary intersection distance from the origin. The first primary intersection distance and the second primary intersection distance may be substantially equal.
A subset gamut linear range may be defined along the subset gamut line between the first primary line and the second primary line. The subset gamut linear range may include a first primary linear range and a second primary linear range. The first primary linear range may be compared to the second primary linear range to determine a first primary linear ratio proportional to a first portion of the subset gamut linear range. The first portion of the subset gamut linear range may be comprised of the first primary linear range, and the first primary linear ratio determining a luminosity of the first subset primary included in the output signal.
The second primary linear range may be compared to the first primary linear range to determine a second primary linear ratio proportional to a second portion of the subset gamut linear range comprised of the second primary linear range, and the second primary linear ratio determining the luminosity of the second subset primary included in the output signal. The luminosity of the first subset primary and the second subset primary may be analyzed to determine the desired luminosity of the high efficacy light included in the output signal.
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Those of ordinary skill in the art realize that the following descriptions of the embodiments of the present invention are illustrative and are not intended to be limiting in any way. Other embodiments of the present invention will readily suggest themselves to such skilled persons having the benefit of this disclosure. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
In this detailed description of the present invention, a person skilled in the art should note that directional terms, such as “above,” “below,” “upper,” “lower,” and other like terms are used for the convenience of the reader in reference to the drawings. Also, a person skilled in the art should notice this description may contain other terminology to convey position, orientation, and direction without departing from the principles of the present invention.
A person of skill in the art will appreciate that, while the following disclosure may discuss the lighting signal converter 10 of the present invention as converting a source signal 20, which may be defined in the xyY color space, into an output signal 40 that may be defined in one of a RGW, RBW, or GBW color space, additional conversions are intended to be include within the scope and spirit of the present invention. A skilled artisan will also appreciate conversion operations, which may involve converting a source signal 20 into an output signal 40 to drive light emitting devices 50. A skilled artisan will further appreciate that the output signal 40 may include a color space, defined within a subset gamut 102 of a full color gamut 100, to be included as part of the present invention.
Referring now to
In the following disclosure, referring initially to
Referring back to
As perhaps best illustrated in
As perhaps best illustrated in
Referring again back to
In the xyY space, the “x” and “y” values may define the chromaticity of the color to be emitted by a lighting source 50 via the relative location of a corresponding point plotted on a CIE 1931 chromaticity diagram. The “Y” value may define the brightness of the color to be emitted by the lighting source 50 for the corresponding color point defined by the “x” and “y” value.
By combining the color as defined by the chromaticity values with the corresponding luminosity defined by the brightness values, virtually any color may be defined within the xyY color space. Additionally, since the xyY color space may include a brightness value, calculating the luminance of the high efficacy lighting source 58 may advantageously be simplified.
As previously mentioned, the xyY color space is derived from the XYZ color space. The “x” and “y” components may represent may the chromasity of the emitted color, which may correlate with the three colors sensed by the “cone” photoreceptors in the human eye. This correlation may contribute to enhanced color reproduction accuracy. Also, since the “Y” brightness value of the xyY color space defines the brightness of the corresponding colored light, the xyY color space may accurately convey the brightness as perceived by the “rod” photoreceptors in the human eye. For this reason, the CIE 1931 xyY color space, and the related XYZ color space, may advantageously provide accurate color reproduction, while allowing a simplified conversion between other color spaces, such as the RGB (red-green-blue) three dimensional color space.
The output signal 40 may define the colored light in a three dimensional color space, such as a color space included within a subset gamut 102 of the full color gamut 100. The term gamut may be defined by the dictionary as an entire range or series, and when the term is applied to color, gamut may define a complete range of colors that may be accurately produced within a color space. Correspondingly, a full color gamut 100 is intended to include all colors that may be produced within a given color space.
Additionally, as used within this disclosure, the full color gamut 100 may be segmented into one or more subset gamuts 102. The following disclosure may describe subset gamuts 102 as separate from one another and collectively forming a full color gamut 100. However, a person of skill in the art will appreciate embodiments wherein multiple subset gamuts 102 may define the same color range within the color space, in an overlapping fashion, to be included within the scope of the present invention.
As illustrated in
Continuing to refer to the equilateral triangle representing the full color gamut 100, a range of colors that may be produced by mixing the primaries can be located within the triangle. For example, the secondary color of cyan, which may include an equal amount of light produced by two primaries 112, may be represented at the midpoint of the triangle's side, between the blue primary and the green primary. Additional colors that may include light from three primaries may be represented at locations within the interior of the triangle.
An origin 120 may be located approximately at the center of the triangle representing the full color gamut 100. The origin 120 may indicate the location wherein the corresponding light includes an equal amount of colored light emitted from each of the primaries 112, combining to produce a white light. As will be described below, a high efficacy light 138, such as a white light, may be defined at approximately the origin 120 of the triangular model of the full color gamut 100.
The full color gamut 100 may be segmented into subset gamuts 102. Continuing the equilateral triangle model discussed above, for clarity, the full color gamut 100 may be segmented into three equal subset gamuts 102. Each subset gamut 102 may include and be defined by the origin 120 and two primaries 112. The two primaries used to define one of the subset gamuts may be defined as a first subset primary and a second subset primary. For example, and with reference to
Referring now to
A high efficacy light 138 may be created from the light provided by the three primaries 132, 134, 136 emitting light of substantially equivalent luminosity. Correspondingly, light that would otherwise be produced by combining equal amounts of colored light emitted from the primaries 132, 134, 136 may advantageously be replaced by a single high efficacy light 138, such as a white light.
As discussed above, colored light may include light from each primary 132, 134, 136 with varying levels of luminosity. As a result, one primary 136 may require less luminosity that the other primaries 132, 134 to create the desired colored light, defining a minimum color luminosity. Primaries 132, 134 that provide light with greater luminosity than the minimum color luminosity must emit light with at least the minimum color luminosity. Therefore, an equivalent amount of light may be provided by each of the primaries up to the minimum color luminosity may be advantageously emulated by the high efficacy light 138.
As discussed above, red, blue, and green colored light may include light from each primary 132R, 134B, 136G, with varying levels of luminosity. As a result, the green primary 136G may require less luminosity that the red and blue primaries 132R, 134B to create the desired colored light, defining a minimum color luminosity. The red and blue primaries 132R, 134B that provide light with greater luminosity than the minimum color luminosity must emit light with at least the minimum color luminosity. Therefore, an equivalent amount of light may be provided by each of the primaries up to the minimum color luminosity may be advantageously emulated by the high efficacy light 138W.
Referring additionally to
The following examples have been provided to help clarify the use of a high efficacy light source 58 to replace the need for a third primary color light source 56. A person of skill in the art will appreciate that the following examples are provided for illustrative purposes, and are not intended to be limiting in any way.
For additional clarity, the follow examples may be described in a first specific non-limiting example, wherein the first primary light source 52 may be assumed to emit a red light and the second primary light source 54 may be assumed to emit a blue light. The following examples may additionally be described in a second specific non-limiting example, wherein the first primary light source 52 may be assumed to emit a green light and the second primary light source 54 may be assumed to emit a red light.
More specifically, as illustrated in
Additionally, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated by the examples above, virtually any color that may be produced by a lighting device 50 that replaces a third primary light source 56 with a high efficacy light source 58. Such a lighting device 50 may be advantageously driven by the output signal 40 generated by the signal creator during the conversion operation.
The signal converter 10 may perform a computerized conversion operation to accept a source signal 20, which may include a color in a color space defined within the full color gamut 100, analyze the source signal 20, and generate an output signal 40 in a color space defined within a subset gamut 102. The signal conversion operation may be performed by a component of the signal converter 10, such as a signal conversion engine 30. The signal conversion engine 30, and generally the signal conversion operation, may be performed on a computerized device such as the controller 60.
In an embodiment of the present invention, as perhaps best illustrated by the flowchart 200 of
Included as a non-limiting example, a signal conversion engine 30 of the signal converter 10 may perform the conversion operation mentioned above by calculating the equations that are expressed below. A person of skill in the art will appreciate additional equations and algorithms that may be used to perform the steps of the matrix conversion operation described herein that would be considered within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
Starting at Block 202, using the fundamental rules of colorimetry, the matrix conversion operation may begin by using the primaries 112 to create matrices to include the high efficacy origin (Block 204), as shown below in Expression 1.
The signal conversion operation may then calculate the X, Y, and Z values from the source signal 20 formatted as a xyY color space (Block 206), as shown below in Expression 2.
The conversion operation may next calculate the determinate of the matrices (Block 208), as shown in Expression 3.
The determinate may be used to calculate the matrix of minors (Block 210), as shown in Expression 4.
With the matrix of minors, the conversion operation may calculate the matrix of cofactors (Block 212), as shown in Expression 5.
The conversion operation may next calculate the adjunct of the matrix (Block 214), as shown in Expression 6.
The conversion operation may then determine the inverse matrix from the adjunct of the matrix (Block 216), as shown in Expression 7.
The conversion operation may next calculate a scalar from the inverse matrix, which may include scalar values (Block 218). The conversion operation may analyze the values of the scalar as it may describe each color space defined within a subset gamut 102. This comparison may start with the color space defined by a first subset gamut (Block 220).
The signal converter 10 then may determine whether the scalar returned by the conversion operation includes all positive scalar values (Block 222). If the scalar value for the color space defined by a subset gamut 102 includes a negative number, the scalar may not be included within that subset gamut. The signal converter 10 may then analyze the scalar in the next subset gamut 102 (Block 224), after which it may return to the operation described in Block 222.
Conversely, if the scalar includes all positive scalar values at Block 222, the signal converter 10 may determine that the scalar value is included in the color space defined by the correct subset gamut 102. The signal converter 10 may then output the output signal 40 relative to the color space defined by the proper subset gamut 102 (Block 226). After outputting the output signal 40, the matrix conversion operation may end (Block 230).
Referring back to
The color space defined within a subset gamut 102 may include a limited number of colors that are otherwise included in the full color gamut 100. However, the colors defined within the full color gamut 100 may be represented via the combination of the various subset gamuts 102. Correspondingly, a color space included within a subset gamut 102 will also be included as part of color space defined within the full color gamut 100.
In an example of the present invention, as illustrated in
With reference to
In this specific example, the color spaces defined within the subset gamuts 102 may include two primaries 112 and the origin 120. A first subset gamut 102RB may be defined to include a red primary 112R, a blue primary 112B, and the white origin 120W. Similarly, a second subset gamut 102RG may be defined to include a red primary 112R, a green primary 112G, and the white origin 120W. A third subset gamut 102GB may be defined to include a green primary 112G, a blue primary 112B, and the white origin 120. In this example, a color that may exist in the color space defined within the full color gamut 100 may also exist in at least one of the color spaces defined within a subset gamut 102.
An embodiment of the conversion operation using an angular conversion operation, as perhaps best illustrated in
The signal converter 10 may then determine a color angle 156 within the three dimensional color space defined by the subset gamut 102 relative to the color of the light defined by the source signal 20. The color space defined within the subset gamut 102 may be radially enclosed between a first primary angle 152 and a second primary angle 154. The first primary angle 152 may be defined as the angle of a line that may extend from the origin 102 to the first primary 148 of the subset gamut 102. The second primary angle 154 may be defined as the angle of the line that may extend from the origin 120 to the second primary 148 of the subset gamut 102.
A color angle 156 may be defined relative to the location of the color of the light 142, as it has been plotted within the subset gamut 102 from the source signal 20, as shown by Expression 8.
A first primary angular range may be defined to enclose the angular range between the first primary angle 152 and the color angle 156. The first angular range is illustrated on
The signal converter 10 may then compare the first primary angular range Θ and the second primary angular range β to determine the relative luminosity emitted by each primary. By dividing the first primary range Θ by the sum of the first and second primary angular ranges Θ, β, the signal converter 10 may determine a first primary angular ratio. Similarly, by dividing the second primary angular range β by the sum of the first and second primary angular ranges Θ, β, the signal converter 10 may determine a second primary angular ratio. An example of these calculations, wherein the first primary light source 52 emits a red light, and wherein the second primary light source emits a green light 54, are shown by Expression 9.
The luminosity of the high efficacy light 138 may be calculated from the relative luminosity of the light emitted first and second primaries 146, 148. Alternately, the luminosity of the high efficacy light 138 may be determined by the “Y” value of a xyY source signal 20, as will be appreciated by a person of skill in the art.
An embodiment of the conversion operation using a linear conversion operation, as perhaps best illustrated in
The signal converter 10 may then determine a color point 162 within the three dimensional color space defined by the subset gamut 102 relative to the color of the light defined by the source signal 20. The color space defined within the subset gamut 102 may be enclosed between a first primary line 172 and a second primary line 174. The first primary line 172 may be defined as a line that may extend from the origin 120 to the first primary 166 of the subset gamut 102. The second primary 174 line may be defined as a line that may extend from the origin 102 to the second primary 168 of the subset gamut 102.
A color line 164 may be defined using the slope equation, as shown by Expression 10. In this expression, “y” and “x” may be defined by values included in a xyY source signal 20. The “m” value may define the slope of the color line 164. The “b” value may define the intercept of the y-axis relative to the plotting of the color point 162 within a coordinate system. An example coordinate system may include the equilateral triangle representing the color space defined by full color gamut 100.
y=mx+b Expression 10
The slope may be further defined by the equation shown in Expression 11.
The point at which the color line 164 may intercept the y-axis, represented by “b,” may be defined to be located at the origin 120. This location of the y-intercept as the origin 120 results in all “b” values becoming zero, simplifying the equation sown in Expression 10 into the equation shown in Expression 12.
∴y=mx Expression 12
Additionally, a subset gamut 169 line may be defined to intersect the color point 162, the first primary line 172, and the second primary line 174. More specifically, the subset gamut line 169 may intersect the first primary line 172 at a first distance 176 from the origin 120. Similarly, the subset gamut 169 line may intersect the second primary line 174 at a second distance 178 from the origin 120. Preferably, the first distance 176 and the second distance 178 are approximately equal. As a result, the subset gamut line 169 may intersect the first and second primary lines 166, 168 at approximately the same distance from the origin 120, additionally intersecting the color point 162.
The linear signal conversion operation may analyze the subset gamut line 169, as it has been defined above, to determine the boundaries of each color space. In performing the linear signal conversion operation, the signal converter 10 of the present invention may additionally determine the length of each line as it may relate to the origin by calculating a hypotenuse, as shown in Expression 13.
h=√{square root over (x2+y2)} Expression 13
The signal converter 10 may next determine the location of the color point 162 in relation to the first and second primary lines 172, 174, via performance of the above steps for the linear signal conversion operation.
A first primary linear range may be defined along the subset gamut line 169 between the first primary line 172 and the color line 164. The first linear range is illustrated on
The signal converter 10 may then compare the first primary linear range LΘ and the second primary linear range Lβ to determine the relative luminosity emitted by each primary. By dividing the first primary linear range LΘ by the sum of the first and second primary linear ranges, LΘ, Lβ, the signal converter 10 may determine a first primary linear ratio. Similarly, by dividing the second primary linear range Lβ by the sum of the first and second primary linear ranges, LΘ, Lβ, the signal converter 10 may determine a second primary linear ratio. An example of these calculations, wherein the first primary light emits a red light, and wherein the second primary light emits a green light, are shown by Expression 14.
The luminosity of the high efficacy light 138 may be calculated from the relative luminosity of the light emitted as defined by the first and second primaries 166, 168. Alternately, the luminosity of the high efficacy light 138 may be determined by the “Y” value of the xyY input signal, as will be appreciated by a person of skill in the art.
In an embodiment of the present invention, as perhaps best illustrated by the block diagram in
As a specific example, provided without limitation, an input signal may be defined within the RGBW, which may be included within the RGB color space 192. For clarity, the preconditioning of the input signal that includes a color defined within the RGBW color space will be described in this example using the matrices to precondition the input signal into a desired source signal 20. A person of skill in the art will appreciate that additional operation that may be used to precondition an input signal that includes a color defined in various other color spaces into the source signal 20 to be used by the signal converter 10 to perform the conversion operation.
In this example, the RGBW input signal may be represented as non-square matrices. The preconditioning of the RGBW input signal may begin by finding the pseudo-inverse of the non-square matrices that represent the input signal, as shown in Expression 15.
The preconditioning operation may be performed by reducing the non-square matrix into a bidiagonal matrix. The preconditioning operation may then compute the singular value decomposition (SVD), as it is defined in the Fundamental Theorem of Linear Algebra. Using SVD, the preconditioning operation may decompose the non-square matrices into three matrices, as shown in Expression 16.
[A]=[U][Σ][V]−1 Expression 16
In the preceding expression, [A] may represent the non-square matrix, [U] may represent an orthogonal 3×3 matrix, and [Σ] may represent a non-square 4×3 matrix. Additionally, the [Σ] value may be a diagonal matrix, and therefore may only include zeros off of the diagonal values, as will be understood by a person of skill in the art. The diagonal values may be eigenvalues of [A] (where σ1≧σ2≧σ3≧ . . . ≧σn).
For [U] and [V], eigenvectors may comprise column value, as they may be defined in the matrices. A computation known within the art may then be performed to precondition the input signal into a inverted matrix. This inverted matrix may provide the preconditioned source signal 20 that may be converted into the output signal 40.
In an additional embodiment, the signal converter 10 of the present invention may include a photodiode to determine the color of light being emitted by LEDs. The LEDs may be driven by the output signal 40 generated by the signal converter 10 via a conversion operation. Upon sensing the color of emitted light, the photodiode may transmit a color feedback signal to the signal converter 10 of the present invention. The signal converter 10 may then adjust the luminosity emitted by one or more of the primary light sources 52, 54, 56 and/or the high efficacy light source 58. The adjustments may be made to correct for discrepancies between the intended color defined by the output signal 40 and the actual color being emitted by a lighting device 50, driven by the output signal 40.
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
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