The invention relates to a method for controlling a lighting system.
WO 2004/057927 discloses a method for configuration a wireless controlled lighting system. The prior art system comprises a central master control device, several local control master devices, which are linked to the central master device, and, associated with each local control master device, one or more lighting units and a portable remote control device. Each lighting unit and the portable control device are linked to their associated local control master device by a wireless connection. Light emitted by a lighting unit is modulated by an identification code, which was stored in the lighting unit before controlling the lighting unit. When used, the portable control device must be positioned to receive modulated light from one lighting unit only. The portable control device is suitable to derive the identification code of a lighting unit contained in the received modulated light. The portable control device has a user interface by which a user can enter additional data, which is sent to its associated local control master device together with the identification code received from a lighting unit. Said additional data may contain an indication of a switch or key which the user assigns to the lighting unit to operate the lighting unit from then on, such as for turning on or off. Then, the data is communicated to the central master device for general lighting management.
WO 2004/057927 also discloses that a lighting unit may be equipped with an additional light source, such as a LED device, for transmitting the modulated light instead of using the light source used for normal lighting.
The prior art method and part of the system to carry out such method are related to associate an identification code of a lighting unit or of a group of lighting units with some control means, such as a button or a sequence of buttons, of the remote control device. Different identification codes are associated with different control means, such as buttons, of the remote control device.
With the prior art the control of lighting units is carried out by forward control only, that is, without any kind of feedback about actual lighting conditions and locations of the lighting units. For example, an object can be illuminated by any number of lighting units directly, but also indirectly as a result of reflections. With the prior art system it is not possible to measure lighting effects seen from any of different standpoints of view towards lighting sources or to an object, which is illuminated by any number of lighting sources and to control lighting units dependent on measured and wanted lighting effects.
It is an object of the invention to provide a method which enables to change lighting of a specific area or object, which may be illuminated by different lighting units at the same time, without requiring from a user to indicate specific lighting sources to provide a wanted lighting effect for said area or object
The above object of the invention is achieved by providing a method as described in claim 1.
Accordingly, illumination of a specific area or object can be changed without requiring from a user to know which lighting sources are responsible for a present lighting of the area or object and which lighting sources need to be controlled and to what extend for obtaining a wanted lighting for the area or object.
The above object of the invention is also achieved by providing a lighting system as described in claim 10.
The invention will become more gradually apparent from the following exemplary description in connection with the accompanying drawing. In the drawing:
A lighting unit 6 comprises a slave controller 10, which is connected to the link 8, a lighting source 12 and a modulated light source 14.
The lighting source 12 is a light source for normal lighting and it can be controlled by the slave controller 10 to change a lighting property of the emitted light, such as intensity and color. The slave controller 10 can be controlled by the master controller 2 to control the lighting source 12 accordingly.
The modulated light source 14 is, for example, an infrared light (IR) source. The modulated light source 14 is suitable to emit light which is different from modulated light emitted by other modulated light sources 14, such as by emitting at different instances (or time division emission), using different identifications to modulate with or using spread spectrum modulation. Such emissions of modulated light makes it possible to identify a modulated light source 14 emitting sensed modulated light and thereby the lighting source 12 of the same lighting unit 6. The modulated light may be modulated to carry data about the lighting unit 6, possibly in addition to an identification.
Radiation patterns of the lighting source 12 and of the modulated light source 14 of the same lighting unit 6 are made to coincide substantially.
The lighting system further comprises a remote control device 16. The remote control device 16 has a light-sensing part (or device), which has a light entrance 18 which provides a viewing area, indicated by a cone 19 in
As shown in
If the user 20 operates the remote control device 16 to receive reflected light from an object, which is illuminated by a lighting unit 6, because of the substantially coinciding radiation patterns, the remote control device 16 will receive light from both the lighting source 12 and the modulated light source 14 of that lighting unit 6. The remote control device 16 is suitable to detect a change of intensity of modulated light it received, so that the remote control device or the master controller 2 can identify the modulated light source 14 having emitted the received modulated light with said change of intensity.
In general one wants to control lighting sources 12 which may contribute to a wanted illumination of a particular object. It is of interest then to determine possible contributions by all lighting sources 12 to said illumination. In any different location one may perceive different light contributions reflected by the object. Therefore the remote control device 16, or its sensing device, is suitable to measure the intensity of modulated light received from any modulated light source 14, that is, with a greater resolution than offered by on/on control.
The modulated light sources 14 may emit light constantly or during some period dependent on operation of the remote control device 16 by the user 20. At the time a modulated light source 14 generates and emits light the light has a maximum intensity. The modulated light will diverge according to a radiation pattern of the modulated light source 14. So will light emitted by the lighting device of the same lighting unit 6. Because the lighting source 12 and the modulating light source 14 have substantially coinciding radiation patterns for each lighting source 12 a light contribution to illumination of an object with respect to a maximum contribution level by said source 12 can be determined. Data containing values of intensity measurements on sensed modulated light are sent to the master controller 2. Data about a wanted illumination or illumination change indicated by the user 20 by operating the remote control device 16 is also sent to the master controller. The master controller 2 may control the lighting sources 12 dependent on data it receives from the remote control device 16 and (or inclusive) identifications of modulated light sources 14 which were responsible for the data about light intensities. The master controller 2 may carry out the control also dependent on properties of lighting sources 12, such as about lighting power and aging, acquired in advance or with each emission of light by a modulated light source 14. The control may also be made dependent on actual illumination of other areas or objects, so as to maintain such illumination and to achieve the wanted illumination by what ever combinations of lighting sources 12.
With the modulated light source 14 of a lighting unit 6 being connected to the slave controller 10 of said lighting unit 6, the master controller 2 may control the slave controller 10 of different lighting units 6 to emit the modulated light at instances, which are determined by the master controller. In other cases the different modulated light sources 14 will emit modulated light at different, unrelated or random instances. The light must be modulated then with an identification code of the emitting modulated light source 14. Because collision of transmissions of modulated light by different modulated light sources 14 may occur then, the modulated light sources 14 are suitable to repeat their emissions at least once and with a random interval between transmissions and the remote control device 16 and the master controller 2 operate to detect modulated light and to process data there from received during at least a longest possible interval of the random interval between transmissions.
It is noted that it is not required that the lighting system comprises a master controller 2 and apart there from one or more slave controllers 10. A master controller (or a controller in general) may be suitable to directly control lighting units 6 without requiring that the lighting units 6 contain a slave controller 10 or that a slave controller is used. A master controller (or a controller in general) may be suitable to directly control lighting units 6.
It is noted also that any lighting source 12 can be of a type which allows modulation of the light emitted by it such that the modulation can not be perceived by humans, such as by very short intervals of on or off switching. In that case a lighting source 12 and a modulated light source 14 of the same lighting unit 6 can be the same source, such as a light emitting diode (LED). There is no need to speak about a lighting unit then, since it can be simply that same light source (LED). Of course measures must be taken that a lighting source emits light at least shortly before the time a user wants to change illumination of an object, which the master controller might use for the illumination. This can be achieved simply during times when a lighting source apparently is turned off by turning on the lighting source intermittently during short intervals, which are not perceivable by humans.
The system of the second embodiment of
The system further comprises a remote control device 42 which can be held by hand by a user 20. Different from the first embodiment the remote control 42 does not sense light but, on command of the user, it emits light as a wireless control signal, which contains an activation command. A cone 44 indicates an intensity of the wireless control signal having an intensity, which is a minimum intensity to usably be received by a sensing device 40. When a sensing device 40 senses the wireless control signal and it retrieves the activation command from it, the system will use control data acquired for the sensing device 40 for changing a lighting effect of the area containing the sensing device 40, while maintaining lighting effects of areas containing the other sensing devices 40.
The second lighting system illustrated by
Optionally, with the second embodiment of
With the lighting system according to the third embodiment of
The lighting units 48 have a maximum frequency by which their emitted light can be modulated. The inverse of the maximum frequency defines a minimum modulation interval. A clock signal is generated providing pulses having a cycle time which is greater than said minimum modulation interval. It is assumed here that the clock cycle time or period T1 (first interval).
The intensity of light emitted by a lighting unit 48 on average during some time can be controlled by changing a duration of a second interval T2 during which the lighting unit 48 is switched on inside a constant third interval T3, that is, by controlling a duty cycle defined by a ratio of T2/T3. T3 is chosen to be short enough to make the on/off modulation not perceivable by a human.
In addition to the intensity control by controlling the duty cycle T2/T3, the light is modulated by the unique code of the emitting lighting unit 48. The code comprises a number of code bits, which in the field of CDMA are called “chips”. A chip has a duration of T3=N*T1, with N being an integer. Therefore, T2=M*T1, with M being a smaller integer than N. To differentiate between a chip value “0” and a chip value “1” the second interval T2 is located at two different locations inside the interval T3, dependent on which chip value must be presented. In the example of
The lighting units 48 may, just like the lighting units 6, 34 of the first and second embodiments, transmit data, such as about properties of the lighting units, as well by proper modulation of the emitted light. With the third embodiment this can be done by using two codes per lighting unit 48, one for representing a “0” data bit (or channel bit) and one for representing a “1” data bit. For example, the two codes may be composed of the same chips, but in reversed order.
It is observed that the concept of the third embodiment with regard to simultaneously emissions of modulated light by different lighting units using a spread spectrum modulation technique can be applied to the first and second embodiments also.
The three embodiments described above have in common that a sensing device identifies all lighting units 6, 34, 48 from which the sensing device senses modulated light, it measures an intensity of the modulated light emitted by each identified lighting unit 6, 34, 48 and it communicates data about that to a common controller to let the controller control the lighting units 6, 34, 48, such as to obtain a wanted lighting or lighting effect in an area in which the sensing device is located. For each embodiment a lighting unit 6, 34, 48 may comprise a light source for emitting the modulated light, which is different from a light source for emitting not modulated light with a higher intensity for lighting of the area in a way that is perceptible for a human. In that case the lighting unit is made such that radiation patterns of the different light sources substantially coincide, as if the lighting unit comprised only one source.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05103279 | Apr 2005 | EP | regional |
05103292 | Apr 2005 | EP | regional |
05112561 | Dec 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2006/051211 | 4/19/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/22/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2006/111930 | 10/26/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080185969 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |