The subject disclosure relates to light conveyance in a lidar system with a monocentric lens.
Vehicles (e.g., automobiles, trucks, construction equipment, farm equipment, automated factory equipment) increasingly include sensors that obtain information about the vehicle operation and the environment around the vehicle. Some sensors, such as cameras, radio detection and ranging (radar) systems, and lidar systems can detect and track objects in the vicinity of the vehicle. By determining the relative location and heading of objects around the vehicle, vehicle operation may be augmented or automated to improve safety and performance. For example, sensor information may be used to issue alerts to a driver of the vehicle or to operate vehicle systems (e.g., collision avoidance systems, adaptive cruise control system, autonomous driving system). A coherent lidar system transmits frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) light and processes reflected beams to determine information about the target. Information obtained by the lidar system improves as the amount of light reflected by a target that is captured by the lidar system increases. A monocentric lens such as a ball lens, with spherical symmetry, may be used such that the aperture is the diameter of the lens and light enters without angle-dependent distortion. The light obtained by the monocentric lens must be conveyed to the receive path of the lidar system and the light output by the lidar system must be conveyed to the monocentric lens. Accordingly, it is desirable to provide light conveyance in a lidar system with a monocentric lens.
In one exemplary embodiment, a coherent lidar system includes a light source to output a continuous wave, and a modulator to modulate a frequency of the continuous wave and provide a frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) signal. The system also includes a ball lens to obtain a receive beam resulting from a reflection of an output signal, obtained from the FMCW signal, by a target, and a light conveyer to convey the receive beam obtained by the ball lens to a beam steering device that directs the receive beam to a receive path of the system.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer includes a bundle of optical fibers in a fiber taper bundle.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer further includes a collimator such that the ball lens is at one end of the fiber taper bundle and the collimator is at an opposite end of the fiber taper bundle.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the collimator is configured to direct the receive beam conveyed from the ball lens through the fiber taper bundle to the beam steering device.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer includes an array of lenses arranged adjacent to the ball lens as a micro lens array.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer further includes a static mirror configured to reflect the receive beam that is obtained by the ball lens and focused on the static mirror by the micro lens array onto the beam steering device.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the system also includes a circulator, wherein the system is monostatic and uses the same ball lens to transmit the output signal and obtain the receive beam.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the system also includes a second ball lens and a second beam steering device to transmit the output signal, wherein the system is bistatic.
In another exemplary embodiment, a method of assembling a coherent lidar system includes arranging a light source to output a continuous wave, and disposing elements to modulate the continuous wave and provide a frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) signal. The method also includes disposing a balls lens to obtain a receive beam resulting from reflection of an output signal, obtained from the FMCW signal, by a target, and arranging a light conveyer to convey the receive beam obtained by the ball lens to a beam steering device that directs the receive beam to a receive path of the lidar system.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the arranging the light conveyer includes arranging a bundle of optical fibers as a fiber taper bundle configured to receive the receive beam obtained by the ball lens.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the arranging the light conveyer further includes arranging a collimator such that the ball lens is at one end of the fiber taper bundle and the collimator is at an opposite end of the fiber taper bundle.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the arranging the collimator includes configuring the collimator to direct the receive beam conveyed from the ball lens through the fiber taper bundle to the beam steering device.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the arranging the light conveyer includes arranging an array of lenses adjacent to the ball lens as a micro lens array.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the arranging the light conveyer further includes arranging a static mirror to reflect the receive beam that is obtained by the ball lens and focused on the static mirror by the micro lens array onto the beam steering device.
In another exemplary embodiment, a vehicle includes a coherent lidar system that includes a light source to output a continuous wave, and a modulator to modulate a frequency of the continuous wave and provide a frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) signal. The coherent lidar system also includes a ball lens to obtain a receive beam resulting from a reflection of an output signal, obtained from the FMCW signal, by a target, and a light conveyer to convey the receive beam obtained by the ball lens to a beam steering device that directs the receive beam to a receive path of the system. The vehicle also includes a vehicle controller to control the vehicle based on information obtained from the receive beam in the coherent lidar system.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer includes a bundle of optical fibers in a fiber taper bundle.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer further includes a collimator such that the ball lens is at one end of the fiber taper bundle and the collimator is at an opposite end of the fiber taper bundle, and the collimator directs the receive beam conveyed from the ball lens through the fiber taper bundle to the beam steering device.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer includes an array of lenses arranged adjacent to the ball lens as a micro lens array.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the light conveyer further includes a static mirror configured to reflect the receive beam that is obtained by the ball lens and focused on the static mirror by the micro lens array onto the beam steering device.
In addition to one or more of the features described herein, the coherent lidar system further comprises a circulator, wherein the system is monostatic and uses the same ball lens to transmit the output signal and obtain the receive beam, or further comprises a second ball lens and a second beam steering device to transmit the output signal, wherein the system is bistatic.
The above features and advantages, and other features and advantages of the disclosure are readily apparent from the following detailed description when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Other features, advantages and details appear, by way of example only, in the following detailed description, the detailed description referring to the drawings in which:
The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, its application or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
As previously noted, sensors may be used to augment or automate vehicle operation. As also noted, one type of sensor is a coherent lidar system that transmits an FMCW signal. The system takes advantage of phase coherence between the transmitted FMCW signal and a reflected signal resulting from reflection of the transmitted FMCW signal by a target. The interference between the reflected signal and a copy of the transmitted signal is used to determine information such as target distance and speed. The coherent lidar system differs from prior time-of-flight lidar systems that transmit a series of pulses and use the duration for transmission of each pulse and reception of the resulting reflection to determine a set of distances for the target.
When the output signal encounters a target within the field of view of the lidar system, the resulting reflected light is scattered in all directions. As previously noted, information obtained by a lidar system improves with an increase in the amount of that reflected light that the lidar system is able to obtain. A ball lens may be used to obtain reflected light from a number of different angles, for example. The reflected light obtained by the ball lens must be conveyed to a beam steering device that provides the reflected light for processing. Embodiments of the systems and methods detailed herein relate to light conveyance in a coherent lidar system with a monocentric lens. A fiber taper bundle may be used in accordance with one exemplary embodiment. A micro lens array and a static mirror or mirror array may be used according to another exemplary embodiment.
In accordance with an exemplary embodiment,
The controller 120 may use the information to control one or more vehicle systems 130. In an exemplary embodiment, the vehicle 100 may be an autonomous vehicle and the controller 120 may perform known vehicle operational control using information from the lidar system 110 and other sources. In alternate embodiments, the controller 120 may augment vehicle operation using information from the lidar system 110 and other sources as part of a known system (e.g., collision avoidance system, adaptive cruise control system). The lidar system 110 and one or more other sensors 115 may be used to detect objects 140, such as the pedestrian 145 shown in
The resonator 220 is an external optical cavity, external to the light source 210. According to the exemplary embodiment shown in
According to alternate embodiments, the FMCW light 227 may be obtained by modulating the frequency at the light source 210 itself. In this case, the controlled voltage 225 applied to the resonator 220, as shown in
A beam splitter 240 is used to split the FMCW signal 235 into an output signal 236 and a local oscillator (LO) signal 237. Both the output signal 236 and the LO signal 237 exhibit the frequency modulation imparted by the controlled voltage 225 or other modulator. The beam splitter 240 may be an on-chip waveguide splitter, for example. The output signal 236 is provided to a light circulating element such as a circulator 250, which is necessary in the monostatic system shown in
The aperture lens is a monocentric lens such as a ball lens 255, according to the exemplary embodiment shown in
A light conveyer 256 conveys light between the beam steering device 257 and the ball lens 255. Different embodiments of the light conveyer 256 are detailed with reference to
While the optical amplifier 260 is shown between the reflector 258 and an alignment element 270 in
The amplified receive beam 265 is provided to the alignment element 270 in which with the amplified receive beam 265 is aligned with the LO signal 237. The alignment element 270 ensures that the amplified receive beam 265 and the LO signal 237 are co-linear and splits the output into two co-linear signals 272a, 272b (generally referred to as 272). The co-linear signals 272a, 272b are respectively directed to a photodetectors 280a, 280b (generally referred to as 280). As
The photodetectors 280 are semiconductor devices that convert the result of the interference between the amplified receive beam 265 and the LO signal 237 in each co-linear signal 272 into electrical currents 285a, 285b (generally referred to as 285). Two photodetectors 280 are used in accordance with a known balanced detector technique to cancel noise that is common to both photodetectors 280. The electrical currents 285 from each of the photodetectors 280 are combined and processed to obtain information like range to the target 140, speed of the target 140, and other information according to known processing techniques. The processing may be performed within the lidar system 110 by a processor 290 or outside the lidar system 110 by the controller 120, for example. The processor 290 may include processing circuitry similar to that discussed for the controller 120.
The power of each co-linear signal 272, which is converted to an alternating photocurrent (i.e., electrical current 285) by each photodetector 280, may be approximated (up to a constant) as:
In EQ. 1, d is the aperture diameter (e.g., diameter of the ball lens 255), R is the range to the target 140, ρ is the target scattering efficiency or reflectivity, PLO is the power of the local oscillator, and PTX is the total power of the output signal 236 transmitted to the target 140. Thus, by increasing the aperture diameter d, the collected signal (receive beam 238) increases proportionally or linearly. The maximum range detectable by the lidar system 110 for fixed powers of the LO signal 237 and output signal 236 increases accordingly, as well. The diameter of the ball lens 255 may be on the order of a half inch to an inch, for example. In comparison with a lidar whose aperture is limited by a MEMS mirror, which has a diameter on the order of 1-5 millimeters, the use of the ball lens 255 improves the collected receive beam 238 by a factor of 5-25.
Since the mapping from the spherical ball lens 255 to the fiber taper bundle 410 is given by f, the mapping from a given optical fiber 510 of the fiber taper bundle 410 to the angle (θ, φ) at which the light entered the spherical ball lens 255 is given by f1. That is, (θ, φ)=f1(−1, 1) when the optical fiber 510 at x and y values of −1 and 1, respectively, carries the receive beam 238. The tilt angle (α, β) of the beam steering device 257 may then be obtained using the function g such that (α, β)=g(−1, 1).
At block 730, arranging one or two sets of a beam steering device 257, light conveyer 256, and ball lens 255 to transmit the output signal 236 and obtain the receive beam 238 differs based on whether the lidar system 110 is a monostatic system or a bistatic system, as indicated by
Disposing the alignment element 270 to make the receive beam 238 and the LO signal 327 co-linear, at block 740, may additionally include disposing an optical amplifier 260 to amplify the receive beam 238 prior to alignment. At block 750, the processes include disposing photodiodes 280 and a processor 120, 290 to detect and process coherent signals. Two photodiodes 280 are arranged in the embodiments shown in
While the above disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from its scope. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the disclosure without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the present disclosure not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but will include all embodiments falling within the scope thereof