This invention relates to nonimaging light assemblies, and more particularly to such light assemblies for use in flashlights, including flashlights that are hand-held in use or that are adapted for being secured to a weapon or other device or object.
Nonimaging light assemblies for flashlights are well known in the art, as are total-internal reflection lenses for collimating the light rays from a light source, such as a light emitting diode, to produce a concentrated light beam for illuminating objects and surroundings. Although such light assemblies of the prior art have been the subject of significant development in recent years, there nevertheless remains a need for light assemblies having improved beam characteristics for utilization in flashlights and compact flashlights in particular.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a nonimaging light assembly for flashlights, for generating a light beam having concentrated and divergent components resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. According to another aspect of the present invention, the light source of the nonimaging light assembly may include a light emitting diode of approximately square configuration whereas the combined output light beam produced by the assembly has a substantially circular cross-section.
In its preferred embodiments, the nonimaging light assembly according to the present invention includes a light source and a lens symmetrical about an optical axis for receiving light from the light source and producing therefrom a light beam having a first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with a concentrated second light component. The preferred lens embodiments include a central refractive first rear surface intersecting the optical axis for receiving a first portion of the light emanating from the light source positioned along the optical axis, an aspheric refractive second rear surface extending about the first rear surface for receiving a second portion of the light emanating from the light source, an aspheric total-internal reflection (TIR) side surface for total-internally reflecting and concentrating light received by the second rear surface, and a refractive front surface for exiting light reflected from the TIR side surface and light received by the first rear surface. The diameter of the first rear surface (which is preferably configured as a flat circle orthogonal to the optical axis), the axisymmetric profile of the second rear surface, and the axisymmetric profile of the TIR side surface are related for exiting at the front surface (which is preferably configured as a flat circle orthogonal to the optical axis) the light beam comprising the concentrated light component combined with the divergent light component.
The light source preferably includes a light emitting diode, typically of approximately square configuration substantially perpendicular to the optical axis, and the combined light beam produced by the lens of the preferred embodiment has a substantially circular cross-section.
The novel features believed to be characteristic of the present invention, together with further advantages thereof, will be better understood from the following description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings (including plots and tables) in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example.
a and 8b comprise a list of sample points on the lens profile shown in
a and 17b comprise a list of sample points on the lens profile shown in
a, 27b, 27c and 27d comprise a list of sample points on the lens profile shown in
a, 28b and 28c comprise a list of sample points on the first rear surface, the second rear surface and the TIR side surface of the lens profile shown in
a and 30b comprise a list of sample points describing the aspheric TIR side surface of the lens shown in
a and 39b comprise a list of sample points on the lens profile shown in
Turning to
The light assembly 16 includes a total-internal reflection (TIR) lens 24 according to a preferred embodiment of the invention as disclosed in the aforementioned application Ser. No. 12/004,664. The lens 24 is rotationally symmetrical about its optical axis a, and is combined with the light source 18 including a light emitting diode (LED) 19, protected by a light-transmitting encapsulant dome 21, situated at the rear of the lens 24 along the optical axis a. The shape and material properties of the lens 24 are such that the lens 24 collects light from the LED source 18 and produces therefrom a light beam comprising an axisymmetrical first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with an axisymmetrical concentrated second light component. In the preferred lens configuration, the light of the combined beam smoothly transitions from the concentrated component to the divergent component as the divergent component surrounds the concentrated component.
The lens 24 is secured in a fixed position to the flashlight head 14, for example by means of an annular flange mount 26 about the front edge of the lens 24 affixed within a groove arrangement 28 of the head 14. The flange mount 26 radially extends from a flange section 27 (
The LED 19 of the light source 18 is secured in a fixed position with respect to the lens 24. For example, a circuit board containing the LED chip 19 may be secured to a further circuit board fixed to the flashlight head 14 (or to the housing 12), the further circuit board containing flashlight circuitry which may include a controller for controlling operation of the LED 19 in combination with the switch 22 and battery 20.
The axisymmetric profile of the preferred embodiment of the lens 24, in the x,z-plane, is shown in
In addition to the front surface 34, the lens 24 includes a refractive first rear surface 36, preferably flat and orthogonally intersecting and symmetrical about the optical axis a, for receiving a first portion of the light emanating from the LED source 18 positioned along the optical axis a. An axisymmetric aspheric refractive second rear surface 38 of the lens 24 symmetrically extends about the first rear surface 36 for receiving a second portion of the light emanating from the LED light source 18. A total-internal reflection (TIR) side surface 40 of the lens 24 extends symmetrically about the optical axis a for total-internally reflecting and concentrating light received by the second rear surface. The diameter of the first rear surface 36, the axisymmetric profile of the second rear surface 38, and the axisymmetric profile of the TIR side surface 40 are related to one another for exiting at the front surface 34 the light beam comprising the first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with the concentrated second light component.
The preferred lens embodiment 24 was designed using the inverse engineering approach described by the present inventors John Bortz and Narkis Shatz in their published article An inverse engineering perspective on nonimaging optical design, Proc. SPIE, v. 2538, pp. 136-156 (1995), which article is incorporated herein by reference. This approach has been implemented in the NonImaging Concentrator Synthesis (NICOS) code, a software tool developed at Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC). The NICOS software is a high-fidelity, high-speed ray tracing code that computes radiometric and/or photometric quantities of interest for optical systems consisting of extended sources and combinations of reflective and/or refractive optical components. In its global-optimization mode, NICOS performs a search in which the shapes and relative orientations of one or more optical components are systematically varied within some multidimensional space of parameters until optimality of a user-specified radiometric or photometric performance measure is achieved.
The NICOS software was set up to maximize the flux within a 6° acceptance angle for producing the desired light beam having concentrated and divergent components within the combined beam resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. Such computer maximization was conducted using the Dynamic Synthesis global optimization software subject to various constraints imposed upon the lens design, including flux distribution of the LED source, physical properties of the lens material, the diameter of the lens exit aperture or front surface 34, and the diameter of the lens entrance aperture or first rear surface 36.
The LED light source 18 employed was a Cree XR-E 7090 white LED marketed by Cree, Inc. (of Durham, N.C.). The photometric source spectrum of the LED used in optimizing and analyzing the lens design is depicted in
The material utilized for the lens 24 was a transparent optical plastic manufactured by ZEON Corporation (of Tokyo, Japan) and marketed under the ZEONEX registered trademark. The refractive index of the ZEONEX plastic lens material as a function of wavelength is shown in
The diameter of the lens 24 exit aperture (the flat front surface 34) was selected as 20.0000 millimeters in the preferred example. The diameter of the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 36) was selected as 3.9342 millimeters, for allocating light from the LED light source such that approximately one-third of the light is received by the first rear surface 36 and approximately two-thirds of the light is received by the second rear surface 38.
The iterative search of the global-optimization process modifies the variable parameters for maximizing the flux within the specified acceptance angle. In particular, modifications were made to the distance along the optical axis a of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 34) to the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 36), the distance of the light source 18 (measured, for example, from the front plane of the LED chip 19) to the lens first rear surface 36, and the axisymmetric shapes of the lens second rear surface 38 and the lens TIR side surface 40, while light ray traces were generated for simulating the light beams that would result from the various combinations searched.
The light ray trace for the resulting optimized lens shape is shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the lens 24 is described by sample points defined by the list of x, y-coordinate pairs set forth in
As may be appreciated from
The list of the x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
The list of x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
Turning to
The light assembly 116 includes a total-internal reflection (TIR) lens 124 according to a preferred embodiment of the invention as disclosed in the aforementioned application Ser. No. 13/135,508. The lens 124 is rotationally symmetrical about its optical axis a, and is combined with the light source 118 including a light emitting diode (LED) 119, protected by a light-transmitting encapsulant dome 121, situated at the rear of the lens 124 along the optical axis a. The shape and material properties of the lens 124 are such that the lens 124 collects light from the LED source 118 and produces therefrom a light beam comprising an axisymmetrical first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with an axisymmetrical concentrated second light component. In the preferred lens configuration, the light of the combined beam smoothly transitions from the concentrated component to the divergent component as the divergent component surrounds the concentrated component.
The lens 124 is secured in a fixed position to the flashlight head 114, for example by means of an annular flange mount 126 about the front edge of the lens 124 affixed within a groove arrangement 128 of the head 114. The flange mount 126 radially extends from a flange section 127 (
The LED 119 of the light source 118 is secured in a fixed position with respect to the lens 124. For example, a circuit board containing the LED chip 119 may be secured to a further circuit board fixed to the flashlight head 114 (or to the housing 112), the further circuit board containing flashlight circuitry which may include a controller for controlling operation of the LED 119 in combination with the switch 122 and battery 120.
The axisymmetric profile of the preferred embodiment of the lens 124, in the x,z-plane, is shown in
In addition to the front surface 134, the lens 124 includes a refractive first rear surface 136, preferably flat and orthogonally intersecting and symmetrical about the optical axis a, for receiving a first portion of the light emanating from the LED source 118 positioned along the optical axis a. An axisymmetric aspheric refractive second rear surface 138 of the lens 124 symmetrically extends about the first rear surface 136 for receiving a second portion of the light emanating from the LED light source 118. A total-internal reflection (TIR) side surface 140 of the lens 124 extends symmetrically about the optical axis a for total-internally reflecting and concentrating light received by the second rear surface. The diameter of the first rear surface 136, the axisymmetric profile of the second rear surface 138, and the axisymmetric profile of the TIR side surface 140 are related to one another for exiting at the front surface 134 the light beam comprising the first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with the concentrated second light component.
The preferred lens embodiment 124 was designed using the inverse engineering approach implemented in the NICOS software, as discussed above with respect to the designing of the preferred embodiment of the lens 24.
For designing the preferred lens embodiment 124, the NICOS software was set up to maximize the flux within a 4° acceptance angle for producing the desired light beam having concentrated and divergent components within the combined beam resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. Such computer maximization was conducted using the Dynamic Synthesis global optimization software subject to various constraints imposed upon the lens design, including flux distribution of the LED source, physical properties of the lens material, the diameter of the lens exit aperture or front surface 134, and the diameter of the lens entrance aperture or first rear surface 136.
The LED light source 118 employed was a Cree XP-E white LED marketed by Cree, Inc. (of Durham, N.C.). The photometric source spectrum of the LED used in optimizing and analyzing the lens design is depicted in
The material utilized for the lens 124 was a transparent optical plastic manufactured by ZEON Corporation (of Tokyo, Japan) and marketed under the ZEONEX registered trademark. The refractive index of the ZEONEX plastic lens material as a function of wavelength is shown in
The diameter of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 134) was selected as 22.000 millimeters in the preferred example. The diameter of the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 136) was selected as 2.431 millimeters, for allocating light from the LED light source such that approximately one-third of the light is received by the first rear surface 136 and approximately two-thirds of the light is received by the second rear surface 138.
The iterative search of the global-optimization process modifies the variable parameters for maximizing the flux within the specified acceptance angle. In particular, modifications were made to the distance along the optical axis a of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 134) to the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 136), the distance of the light source 118 (measured, for example, from the front plane of the LED chip 119) to the lens first rear surface 136, and the axisymmetric shapes of the lens second rear surface 138 and the lens TIR side surface 140, while light ray traces were generated for simulating the light beams that would result from the various combinations searched.
The light ray trace for the resulting optimized lens shape is shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the lens 124 is substantially described by sample points defined by the list of x,y-coordinate pairs set forth in
As may be appreciated from
The list of the x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
The list of x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
Turning to
The light assembly 216 includes a total-internal reflection (TIR) lens 224 according to a preferred embodiment of the invention as disclosed in the aforementioned application Ser. No. 13/373,320. The lens 224 is rotationally symmetrical about its optical axis a, and is combined with the light source 218 including a light emitting diode (LED) 219, protected by a light-transmitting encapsulant dome 221, situated at the rear of the lens 224 along the optical axis a. The shape and material properties of the lens 224 are such that the lens 224 collects light from the LED source 218 and produces therefrom a light beam comprising an axisymmetrical first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with an axisymmetrical concentrated second light component. In the preferred lens configuration, the light of the combined beam smoothly transitions from the concentrated component to the divergent component as the divergent component surrounds the concentrated component.
The lens 224 is secured in a fixed position to the flashlight head 214, for example by means of an annular flange mount 226 about the front edge of the lens 224 affixed within a groove arrangement 228 of the head 214. The flange mount 226 radially extends from a flange section 227 (
The LED 219 of the light source 218 is secured in a fixed position with respect to the lens 224. For example, a circuit board containing the LED chip 219 may be secured to a further circuit board fixed to the flashlight head 214 (or to the housing 212), the further circuit board containing flashlight circuitry which may include a controller for controlling operation of the LED 219 in combination with the switch 222 and battery 220.
The axisymmetric profile of the preferred embodiment of the lens 224, in the x,z-plane, is shown in
In addition to the front surface 234, the lens 224 includes a refractive first rear surface 236, preferably flat and orthogonally intersecting and symmetrical about the optical axis a, for receiving a first portion of the light emanating from the LED source 218 positioned along the optical axis a. An axisymmetric aspheric refractive second rear surface 238 of the lens 224 symmetrically extends about the first rear surface 236 for receiving a second portion of the light emanating from the LED light source 218. A total-internal reflection (TIR) side surface 240 of the lens 224 extends symmetrically about the optical axis a for total-internally reflecting and concentrating light received by the second rear surface. The diameter of the first rear surface 236, the axisymmetric profile of the second rear surface 238, and the axisymmetric profile of the TIR side surface 240 are related to one another for exiting at the front surface 234 the light beam comprising the first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with the concentrated second light component.
The preferred lens embodiment 224 was designed using the inverse engineering approach implemented in the NICOS software, as discussed above with respect to the designing of the preferred embodiment of the lens 24.
For designing the preferred lens embodiment 224, the NICOS software was set up to maximize the flux within a 4° acceptance angle for producing the desired light beam having concentrated and divergent components within the combined beam resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. Such computer maximization was conducted using the Dynamic Synthesis global optimization software subject to various constraints imposed upon the lens design, including flux distribution of the LED source, physical properties of the lens material, the diameter of the lens exit aperture or front surface 234, and the diameter of the lens entrance aperture or first rear surface 236.
The LED light source 218 employed was a Cree XP-G white LED marketed by Cree, Inc. (of Durham, N.C.). The photometric source spectrum of the LED used in optimizing and analyzing the lens design is depicted in
The material utilized for the lens 224 was a transparent optical plastic manufactured by ZEON Corporation (of Tokyo, Japan) and marketed under the ZEONEX registered trademark. The refractive index of the ZEONEX plastic lens material as a function of wavelength is shown in
The diameter of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 234) was selected as 33.0 millimeters in the preferred example. The diameter of the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 236) was selected as 3.326 millimeters, for allocating light from the LED light source such that approximately one-third of the light is received by the first rear surface 236 and approximately two-thirds of the light is received by the second rear surface 238.
The iterative search of the global-optimization process modifies the variable parameters for maximizing the flux within the specified acceptance angle. In particular, modifications were made to the distance along the optical axis a of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 234) to the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 236), the distance of the light source 218 (measured, for example, from the front plane of the LED chip 219) to the lens first rear surface 236, and the axisymmetric shapes of the lens second rear surface 238 and the lens TIR side surface 240, while light ray traces were generated for simulating the light beams that would result from the various combinations searched.
The light ray trace for the resulting optimized lens shape is shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the lens 224 is substantially described by sample points defined by the list of x,y-coordinate pairs set forth in
As may be appreciated from
In designing the preferred embodiment of the lens 224 shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the first rear surface 236, the second rear surface 238 and the TIR side surface 240 of the lens 224, as shown in
As may be appreciated from
The list of the x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
The list of x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
Turning to
Although the light assembly 316 may be utilized with a flashlight of the normally hand-held type exemplified in
The light assembly 316 includes a total-internal reflection (TIR) lens 324 according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention. The lens 324 is rotationally symmetrical about its optical axis a, and is combined with the light source 318 including a light emitting diode (LED) 319 situated at the rear of the lens 324 along the optical axis a. The shape and material properties of the lens 324 are such that the lens 324 collects light from the LED source 318 and produces therefrom a light beam comprising an axisymmetrical first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with an axisymmetrical concentrated second light component. In the preferred lens configuration, the light of the combined beam smoothly transitions from the concentrated component to the divergent component as the divergent component surrounds the concentrated component.
The lens 324 is secured in a fixed position to the flashlight head 314, for example by means of an annular flange mount 326 about the front edge of the lens 324 affixed within a groove arrangement 328 of the head 314. The flange mount 326 radially extends from a flange section 327 (
The LED 319 of the light source 318 is secured in a fixed position with respect to the lens 324. For example, a circuit board containing the LED chip 319 may be secured to a further circuit board fixed to the flashlight head 314 (or to the housing 312), the further circuit board containing flashlight circuitry which may include a controller for controlling operation of the LED 319 in combination with the switch 322 and battery 320.
The axisymmetric profile of the preferred embodiment of the lens 324, in the x,y-plane, is shown in
In addition to the front surface 334, the lens 324 includes a refractive first rear surface 336, preferably flat and orthogonally intersecting and symmetrical about the optical axis a, for receiving a first portion of the light emanating from the LED source 318 positioned along the optical axis a. An axisymmetric aspheric refractive second rear surface 338 of the lens 324 symmetrically extends about the first rear surface 336 for receiving a second portion of the light emanating from the LED light source 318. A total-internal reflection (TIR) side surface 340 of the lens 324 extends symmetrically about the optical axis a for total-internally reflecting and concentrating light received by the second rear surface. The diameter of the first rear surface 336, the axisymmetric profile of the second rear surface 338, and the axisymmetric profile of the TIR side surface 340 are related to one another for exiting at the front surface 334 the light beam comprising the first light component diverging from the optical axis combined with the concentrated second light component.
The preferred lens embodiment 324 was designed using the inverse engineering approach implemented in the NICOS software, as discussed above with respect to the designing of the preferred embodiment of the lens 24.
For designing the preferred lens embodiment 324, the NICOS software was set up to maximize the flux within a 4° acceptance angle for producing the desired light beam having concentrated and divergent components within the combined beam resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. Such computer maximization was conducted using the Dynamic Synthesis global optimization software subject to various constraints imposed upon the lens design, including flux distribution of the LED source, physical properties of the lens material, the diameter of the lens exit aperture or front surface 334, and the diameter of the lens entrance aperture or first rear surface 336.
The LED light source 318 employed was a model F50280-SF hybrid LED source marketed by Seoul Semiconductor Co. Ltd. (of Seoul, Korea) including a white-light die and an infrared (IR) die that were separately operable. The white-light die was used in optimizing and analyzing the lens design, with the white-light die centered on the lens optical axis a. The photometric source spectrum of the white-light die used in optimizing and analyzing the lens design is depicted in
The material utilized for the lens 324 was a transparent optical plastic manufactured by ZEON Corporation (of Tokyo, Japan) and marketed under the ZEONEX registered trademark. The refractive index of the ZEONEX plastic lens material as a function of wavelength is shown in
The diameter of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 334) was selected as 17.145 millimeters in the preferred example. The diameter of the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 336) was selected as 2.212 millimeters, for allocating light from the LED light source such that approximately one-third of the light is received by the first rear surface 336 and approximately two-thirds of the light is received by the second rear surface 338.
The iterative search of the global-optimization process modifies the variable parameters for maximizing the flux within the specified acceptance angle. In particular, modifications were made to the distance along the optical axis a of the lens exit aperture (the flat front surface 334) to the lens entrance aperture (the flat first rear surface 336), the distance of the light source 318 (measured, for example, from the front plane of the LED chip 319) to the lens first rear surface 336, and the axisymmetric shapes of the lens second rear surface 338 and the lens TIR side surface 340, while light ray traces were generated for simulating the light beams that would result from the various combinations searched.
The computer simulated light ray trace for the resulting optimized lens shape is shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the lens 324 is substantially described by sample points defined by the list of x,y-coordinate pairs set forth in
As may be appreciated from
In designing the preferred embodiment of the lens 324 shown in
The axisymmetric profile of the first rear surface 336, the second rear surface 338 and the TIR side surface 340 of the lens 324, as shown in
As may be appreciated from
The list of the x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
The list of x,y-coordinate pairs of sample points in
As discussed above, the shape of the lens 324 was optimized for use with the white-light die 319 of the identified LED light source 318. In addition to the analysis of the resulting lens design using the white-light die described above, the resulting lens design was analyzed in a manner similar to that described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,033,690 of the present inventors (which patent is incorporated herein by reference), using the IR die of the identified light source 318 with the IR die replacing the white-light die and centered on the lens optical axis a. Such analysis indicated that the IR die of the light source 318 may be used with the lens 324 (which was optimized for the white-light die) for producing a satisfactory—although not optimal—IR beam having concentrated and divergent components.
In manufacturing lenses according to the inventions described herein, the x and y positions of the sample points on the axisymmetric profiles represented by the x,y-coordinate pairs may be subject to reasonable tolerances. Such reasonable tolerances should have negligible effect on performance of the light assembly, i.e. the implementation of such tolerances does not noticeably degrade the composite light beam exiting from the lens front surface. Further, the lens front surface may be shifted along the x-coordinate to adjust the thickness of the flange section as previously described.
Thus, there has been described preferred embodiments of nonimaging light assemblies each having a light source and a lens symmetrical about an optical axis for receiving light from the light source and producing therefrom a light beam having a concentrated component and a divergent component resulting in a high intensity core beam surrounded by a smoothly transitioning lower intensity surround beam. In preferred embodiments wherein the light source comprises an approximately square light emitting diode, the resulting combined light beam is of substantially circular cross-section. Other embodiments of the present invention, and variations of the embodiments described herein, may be developed without departing from the essential characteristics thereof. Accordingly, the present invention should be limited only by the scope of the claims listed below.
This application is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/373,320, filed Nov. 10, 2011, incorporated in full herein by reference, which is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/135,508, filed Jul. 7, 2011, incorporated in full herein by reference, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/004,664, filed Dec. 20, 2007, incorporated in full herein by reference, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,007,156, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/879,948, filed Jan. 9, 2007, incorporated in full herein by reference; the present application is also a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/135,508, filed Jul. 7, 2011, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/004,664, filed Dec. 20, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,007,156, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/879,948, filed Jan. 9, 2007.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60879948 | Jan 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13373320 | Nov 2011 | US |
Child | 13374800 | US | |
Parent | 13135508 | Jul 2011 | US |
Child | 13373320 | US | |
Parent | 12004664 | Dec 2007 | US |
Child | 13135508 | US | |
Parent | 13135508 | US | |
Child | 13373320 | US |