1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a camera system and particularly to methods by which a variable aperture can be used to tune image quality parameters in such a system.
2. Description of the Related Art
In its simplest form the camera is an optical device that produces a permanent image on a film or a permanent or temporary image on a light sensitive sensor (hereinafter, film and light sensitive sensor are collectively referred to as a sensor). In use, the image is that of an object positioned at some distance in front of the camera. Light reflected from (or possibly emitted by) the object passes through a lens in the camera and is focused by that lens on the sensor. Generally, the sensor is a planar element that is placed at a certain distance behind the lens, typically at or slightly past the focal length of the lens, denoted f. The focal length is the position at which parallel rays of distant light will pass through the lens and converge to form a point.
A shutter is typically, but not always, positioned between the camera lens and the sensor. By the operation of opening and closing the shutter, which occurs within a selected amount of time, a corresponding amount of light is permitted to pass through the lens and impinge upon the sensor.
An adjustable aperture, typically interposed between the shutter and the sensor, or integrated in the shutter, also controls the amount of light striking the sensor by spatially restricting the amount that has passed through the lens. This spatial restriction is obtained by varying the area of the aperture opening, whereas the shutter imposes a temporal restriction on the light by varying the amount of time it remains open. Szajewski et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 7,310,477) describes a variable aperture camera having a primary lens and a micro lens array.
There are several ways that the area of the aperture opening can be adjusted, most commonly by use of a diaphragm that is mechanically or electrically controlled. Alternative shapes can also be used to construct the variable aperture, such as those proposed by Greenberg (U.S. Pat. No. 6,657,796).
The actual adjustment can be accomplished manually, such as by turning an external ring coupled to the aperture, or automatically, by means of light activated sensors within the body of the camera. Sophisticated light sensing systems have been provided to produce the proper opening for the aperture, for example, the systems of Saito et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,918,538), Keith et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,760,545) and Arai et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,115,319). Typically the area of the aperture opening can range from a maximum, which is the size (i.e., the area) of the lens itself, to some minimum, which is determined by the use to which the camera is to be put.
The area of the aperture opening is measured in terms of “f-stops” or “f-numbers.” These f-stops are assigned numerical values in the following standard sequence: f/1.0, f/1.4, f/2, f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6, f/8, f/11, f/16, f/22, f/32, f/45, f/64 and so on, where the smaller the f-stop, the larger is the aperture opening and the larger the f-stop, the smaller the opening. The numerical value assigned to an f-stop is determined by the ratio of the aperture's diameter to the focal length of the lens, so an f-stop of f/4 indicates that the ratio is 1:4, or, the aperture diameter is ¼ of the focal length of the lens. Thus, the actual physical size of an aperture is not an absolute quantity, but depends on the focal length of the lens. For example, a 50 mm lens (50 millimeters focal length) set at f/4 has an opening of 12.5 mm diameter through which light is admitted, whereas a 400 mm telephoto lens set at f/4 has an opening of 100 mm diameter. Thus a given f-stop setting will admit the same fraction of light through a lens regardless of its focal length.
A lens with a wide maximum aperture is called a “fast” lens, because it can admit a great deal of light. Such a lens can provide sufficient light to the sensor even with a shutter that stays open very briefly, i.e., a fast shutter.
A very compact camera might require a lens with a small focal length because the lens-to-film distance must be kept small. For example, if a camera with a 20 mm lens must have an f-stop of f/4, the lens should have a diameter of 5 mm. Norris (U.S. Pat. No. 3,977,014) shows a focusing system for determining aperture with lens focusing as a direct function of distance to the object.
A property of cameras that photographers use to control the “look” of their photographs is “depth-of-field”. Depth-of-field is the front-to-back distance range within which an object will still appear sharply defined on the sensor. If this distance is small, the camera is said to have a “shallow” depth of field, conversely, if the distance is large, the depth of field is “great.” Photographers can use depth-of-field to create film images in which a portion of the object is sharply focused on the film, whereas portions of the object closer and farther from this point of sharp object focus appear somewhat blurred. In “Optical super-resolution with aperture-function engineering,” E. Ramsay et al., Am. J. of Phys., 76(11) November 2008, pp. 1002-1006, there is a demonstration of the use of apertures to create improved resolution.
The rays of light emanating from a very distant object and entering the camera, after passing through the lens and aperture, will form a cone, with the apex of the cone striking the sensor precisely at a point if the sensor is at the focal length of the lens. If the object is not at a sufficient distance, the rays will not converge to the conical apex, or else will pass through the apex and diverge beyond it. In either case, instead of a point, the light forms a circle (called the circle of confusion) on the sensor within which the image is blurred.
This effect can “focus” the observer of the image's attention on the sharply defined portion, which might be the intention of the photographer. What is important for the photographer is the fact that the depth-of-field can be adjusted by use of the f-stop. Basically, this is because reducing the aperture size restricts the amount of light rays emanating from the object that can reach to film, which, in turn, narrows the cone of light and reduces the size of the circle of confusion away from best focus. Thus, reducing aperture size increases depth-of-field, while increasing aperture size reduces it.
The dependence of depth-of-field on aperture size is but one example of how a variable aperture can be used to tune properties of a camera to achieve an aesthetic effect. It will be the object of this invention to disclose methods of creating a variety of optical effects that are all produced by the variation of aperture size. In this way, the operational range and utility of a camera can be greatly increased and the user of even a basic camera with a minimum of controls is provided with a systematic methodology for achieving a multiplicity of physical and aesthetic effects.
Although many ingenious forms of variable aperture have been described in the art, the degree to which the variable aperture can be used to tune and enhance other properties of the camera system is not yet sufficiently appreciated. In particular, as cameras are increasingly miniaturized for incorporation in various electronic devices, such as cell phones and optical sensors, the myriad of controls found on larger sized cameras will be sacrificed. It is therefore advantageous to be able to apply the most basic of camera operations, the control of aperture size, to be able to create and enhance as wide a range of camera capabilities and properties as possible.
It is the object of this invention to demonstrate simple and advantageous methods to control a wide variety of camera system characteristics by a novel use of only its aperture variability.
It is an additional object of the present invention to extend the capabilities of a camera by manipulation of aperture size and to thereby create an optical instrument with a wider range of image forming abilities than would be expected by nominal design restrictions and standard modes of operation.
It is yet an additional object of the present invention to optimize tradeoffs between competing factors such as diffraction limits and lens aberrations.
It is still an additional object of the present invention to utilize the capabilities of the variable aperture in concert with a lens property such as focal length that varies as a function of lens radius.
When a variable aperture is a part of the optical train of a camera system, adjusting the width or diameter of the aperture opening allows a number of system image quality parameters to be tuned. The ability to tune these parameters, in turn, allows system trade-offs to be made between operational characteristics of the camera such as exposure brightness, exposure time, motion blur, signal-to-noise ratio, modulation transfer function, depth of field, hyperfocal distance, focus, spatial filtering, relative illumination, color saturation, color accuracy, telecentricity and special effects. This tuning ability can be applied with particular advantage to camera systems that lack specific operational controls to directly affect these characteristics.
The following table summarizes the manner in which particular relationships between aperture variability and other camera properties, typically unexploited in normal operation that does not apply the methods of this invention, can be realized advantageously using those methods. In the remainder of the invention description, we will describe in greater detail a methodology for their implementation. Each of the desired camera operations listed in the first column of the table, can be realized using the properties of a variable aperture as listed in the second column.
Each of the preferred embodiments of this invention is a method of implementing or improving the photographic capabilities of a camera by the appropriate use of its variable aperture apparatus. Therefore, the methods provided by these embodiments will effectively transform even a simple camera into a more flexible device and effectively increase its functionality and instrumentality.
Referring first to
In Equation 1, Ii is the faceplate illuminance (the brightness at the image sensor), Iv is the object illuminance at object distance V, R is the object's reflectivity, T is the lens' transmissivity, and f# is the lens' f-number (hereinafter symbolized f# in equations), which is the ratio of its focal length, f, to its aperture width, A. It is through this well known equation that increments in root-2 of the lens' f-number must correspond with increments of two in the exposure time to obtain a constant value of exposure, which is the product of the exposure time t and the faceplate illuminance Ii.
Referring to schematic
In Equation 2, Ps is the power of the flash strobe and V is the object distance, which in the case where the strobe (50) and camera lens (15) are substantially at the same position, is simply the distance between the flash and the object. When Equations 1 and 2 are combined, the result is the expression for faceplate illuminance, Ii given by Equation 3:
From Equation 3, it is seen that if the lens' f-number, f#, which is inverse to its aperture width A, (as in
It is known in the prior art that the apparatus of a variable aperture can be used to adjust the diffraction properties of the image beams. This, in turn, allows adjusting the camera system's hyperfocal distance, H, which is the object distance at which maximum depth of field (maximum range of variation of an object's distance that still provides a sharply focused image) occurs for the given camera system. It is the purpose of the present embodiment to show how a camera having only a fixed focus system can nevertheless achieve the best possible focus, in terms of minimum optical spot size, by means of a variable size aperture.
Referring now to
If the object pixel is moved to new position (25) which is a distance ΔV in front of its previous position so that it is now a distance V′ from the lens, its new image pixel (35) distance U′ will place it a distance ΔU beyond its previous image distance. The variation ΔV is denoted the depth of field of the lens (also referred to as the object defocusing distance) and it produces the corresponding depth of focus ΔU (also referred to as the image defocusing distance). As is stated above, the particular object distance V=H at which the maximum depth of field occurs is called the hyperfocal distance, H, of the lens. The result of applying the thin lens formula to the parameters in
In Equation 5, H is the hyperfocal distance, f is the lens' focal length, λ is the light wavelength (a typical central value being 0.55 microns) and A is the aperture's width as already used above.
To make use of this optimal relationship between depth of field and hyperfocal distance for image quality tuning (i.e. to obtain the best possible focus), we first use the fact that the central lobe of an Airy disk (the optical diffraction limited form of a focused, incoherent light beam) can be very well fit to a Gaussian beam (the optical form of a propagating, coherent light beam) when the first dark ring in the Airy disk is at a radius, r1, equal to root-two times the Gaussian beam's waist radius ω0. This is shown graphically in
√{square root over (2)}ω0=r1=1.22·λ·f# (6)
In Equation 6, ω0 is the radius of the Gaussian beam's waist, r1 is the radius of the Airy disk's first null as shown in
Equation 6 allows a determination of the relation between the lens' f-number and the propagating Gaussian beam's spot size. Furthermore, using the thin lens equation in the context of the parameters shown in the illustration of
When the result of Equation 6 is combined with the Gaussian beam and Airy disk equations displayed in
Furthermore, the best-choice f-number, f#Best, can be calculated by equating to zero the derivative of Equation 7 with respect to f#. f#Best then indicates the f-number choice that will provide the minimum optical spot size on the image sensor when the camera system is focused to an object distance V but the object is actually positioned at a distance V′=(V+ΔV). The result is given in Equation 8:
In Equation 8, the units of length should be in microns. In corresponding fashion, this result (f#Best) can be placed back into Equation 7 to calculate the spot size that results when the best f-number is used, as is shown in Equation 9:
In this manner, the present embodiment of the invention provides a method of using a fixed-focus imaging system (i.e., a lens with no auto-focus) in conjunction with a variable aperture (e.g., an ability to vary the lens' f-number) to obtain the best possible focus (minimum possible optical spot size) at an aperture setting of f#Best. Furthermore, the invention can be extended so that the values of the obtainable minimum optical spot sizes can then also be calculated to determine how much, if any, image processing sharpening could be applied to a captured image to compensate for the degradation in optical spot size due to defocus and corresponding hyperfocal distance tuning to enable a partial refocus (e.g., a minimization of optical spot size). Alternatively, by adjusting the lens' f-number and seeking the highest image sharpness (minimum optical spot size), the best f-number can be found empirically and then used to calculate the object's actual distance, V′. This information is useful and advantageous, for example, for calculating the exposure time when using a flash strobe.
To emphasize the final point above, consider the combination of Equations 3 and 8, which will result in Equation 10:
In Equation 10, V from Equation 3 was replaced by (V+ΔV), as necessary for coordination with Equation 8. From Equation 10 and the definition that an “optimal exposure time”, τ, is that time within which the product of τ and Ii will remain constant and not fluctuate, then the optimal exposure time, τ, of the camera system can be calculated. This is given in Equation 11:
In Equation 11, k is a system constant. Equally, a limitation on ΔV is imposed such that |ΔV|min occurs when f#Best=f#min for the optical system. In this manner, the invention provides the calculation of the optimized exposure time in a fixed focus camera system that correlates with the actual object distance, the best-focus object distance, the lens' focal length and the requisite f# for minimum spot size to provide a faceplate illuminance that is as constant as possible.
In this embodiment, the apparatus of a variable aperture is used to allow object light to access different portions of an imaging lens' radius. In conjunction with this capability, the camera lens is designed so that its focal length function is radially dependent (measured radially outward from the center of the lens within the plane of the lens), meaning that the lens' focal length at one radius on the lens is different than the lens' focal length at another radius on the lens. With this combination, the use of a variable size aperture will allow the camera to perform as though it was equipped with an auto-focus ability. Note that such radial variations can be accomplished by such means as varying the surface curvature of the lens or by varying the index of refraction of the lens material itself.
Referring to
Under conditions of radially-varying focal lengths, varying the aperture of such a lens will cause the average focal length of the lens to vary. Of course, this functionality comes at the expense of having more aberrations in the lens design. However, if the severity of the resulting aberrations, for a given aperture opening width, is less than the severity of defocus due to not refocusing a regular lens, then varying the aperture in this lens design can be a valid approach to imparting to the lens the property of auto-focus. Herein lies the method of this invention using a variable aperture apparatus.
Ideally, the radially-varying lens' focus function would offer an increase in focal length for a corresponding increase in aperture width (or decrease in lens f-number). In this manner, farther objects (which will create in-focus images closer to the lens) will be in focus better with low f-numbers (which also agrees with the previous embodiments of the invention that provided exposure tuning and hyperfocal distance tuning using variable apertures) while closer objects (which create in-focus images farther from the lens) will be in better focus with high f-numbers (which also agrees with the previous results in exposure tuning and hyperfocal distance tuning using variable apertures). See Equations 8 and 10.
It is further noted that the use of a variable aperture to allow the implementation of radial properties of a lens can also be applied to endow a camera system with special effects tuning. For example, special transmission functions (other than variable focal length, index of refraction, etc.), such as color or polarizability may be designed into a lens or into filters placed adjacent to a lens or into regions surrounding the perimeter of a lens, so that changing aperture widths affects the overall optical properties of the lens and camera system.
As with other approaches, post-capture processing can then be employed to deconvolve and/or otherwise sharpen the images to further enhance image quality.
In the method of this embodiment, the apparatus of a variable aperture is used to tune the tradeoff between system sensitivity and system resolution under conditions of low light.
In very low lighting conditions, one of two approaches is typically exercised to capture an image with acceptable quality: 1) lengthen the exposure time, or 2) increase the analog gain of the sensor. In the first approach, long exposure times allow for good system signal to noise ratios, but such times are often are harmful to system image resolution due to motion blur, either from the hand motion of the user or from the object motion of the subject. Thus the sensitivity/resolution product may or may not improve.
In the second approach, short exposure times minimize motion blur, but the low signal to noise ratios that result from short exposures need to be improved by increasing the noise reduction filtering upon post processing (post-capture noise reduction), which blurs the image. Thus, even with this approach, the sensitivity/resolution product may or may not improve.
As an alternative, or at least as an addition to, the above two known prior art approaches, the disclosed method of the present embodiment offers a lens-aperture combination that can achieve a very low f-number. Furthermore, under normal lighting conditions, the variable aperture is closed down to the point where the lens' aberrations are acceptably low for quality imaging (for example, “diffraction limited” imaging).
The method and apparatus of this embodiment provides that during very low light imaging, the variable aperture can be opened up so that the lens achieves a very low f-number (well below the ideal design f-number). During this condition of low f-number, the native image can be captured in a shorter exposure time, so it has less motion-induced blur than in case 1 above. While the aberration in the lens at such low f-numbers may be too high for quality imaging under standard lighting conditions, under low lighting conditions, these aberrations may cause less blurring of the image than would motion artifacts or post-processing noise reduction artifacts. In this manner, a “win” in image quality would occur for this optical system over standard imaging systems.
Referring to
In this system application, the apparatus of a variable aperture is used to adjust the shading (relative illumination profile across the sensor) and/or telecentricity (ray angle profile) of an optical system.
Referring to
Thus, because the variable aperture is placed away (at a variable distance d) from the lens' pupil plane, it effectively casts a shadow onto the lens' pupil according to the aperture's distance from the pupil, the aperture's width relative to the pupil's width and the aperture's shape relative to the pupil's shape.
Referring to
Mathematically, the effect shown in
The actual appearance of the image space can be obtained mathematically by an aperture-space convolution, which is essentially the light intensity within each square image (30) of the aperture integrated across the surface of the lens (the lens entrance pupil). Note that a product in aperture-space is a convolution in image-space.
In the disclosed method, a calculation of the convolution, given the size and shape of the variable aperture and the aperture-to-pupil distance, can be used to tune the shading profile that appears on the sensor and produce desired properties. It should also be noted that differently shaped variable apertures can, in a corresponding manner, be used to create asymmetric blur functions on the image plane, for aesthetic purposes.
Referring to
As is understood by a person skilled in the art, the preferred embodiments of the present invention are illustrative of the present invention rather than limiting of the present invention. Revisions and modifications may be made to methods employed in using a variable aperture in a camera to tune its optical properties, while still providing such methods in accord with the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/217,808, filed Jun. 4, 2009, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety and assigned to a common assignee.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61217808 | Jun 2009 | US |