This invention relates to thermal imaging devices, or more specifically to handheld devices for receiving thermal radiation and converting it to a visible image.
All objects emit a certain amount of infrared radiation as function of their surface temperatures. Generally speaking, the higher the object's temperature the more infrared (IR) radiation is emitted. Generating of a thermal image by a thermographic camera (TC) is well known in art. It is exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 6,144,031 issued to Herring et al. that is incorporated herewith as a reference. TC detects the IR radiation in a way similar to an ordinary photo or video camera (VC) that is, electromagnetic radiation in a visible spectrum. A TC is a device that forms a visible image from invisible infrared radiation. Instead of the 450-750 nanometer range typical for the VC (visible range), the TC operates in longer wavelengths—typically from 3,000 nm to as long as 14,000 nm (14 μm) which is called mid- and far-IR or “thermal IR radiation”. A TC works even in total darkness because visible light level does not matter and is outside of capabilities of its optical and sensing components.
A typical TC consists of five essential components: an optical system, detector, amplifier, signal processing, and display (output device). The optical system focuses the thermal IR image on the sensing elements (pixels) of a thermal IR detector that generates electrical signal. The signal is amplified and processed to convert the invisible IR image into a visible image on the display, often by assigning false colors to specific object temperatures. For use in temperature measurement, the brightest (warmest) parts of the image are customarily colored white, intermediate temperatures—reds and yellows, and the dimmest (coolest) parts are blue. On the output device (display, e.g.), a scale should be shown next to a false color image to relate colors to temperatures. An example of a thermal imaging camera for a temperature screening is a U.S. patent publication No. US 2007/0153871 A1 issued to Fraden, that is incorporated herewith as a reference.
A resolution of a TC is substantially lower than that of the VCs. Often it has no more than 160×120 or 320×240 pixels. That is, less than 77 kilopixels as opposed to several megapixels in a typical VC. Further, a single-pixel TC is the most popular IR detecting device that is known as an infrared thermometer or IRT. All IRTs use either pyroelectric or thermopile detectors as exemplified by the U.S. Pat. No. 4,797,840 issued to Fraden, the patent being incorporated herein as a reference. All imaging TCs use detectors that are divided into cooled (the detector is cryogenically cooled to reduce intrinsic noise) and uncooled (the detector is at ambient temperature). Due to a small optical coupling between the object and the detector, in uncooled detectors the temperature differences at the sensor pixels are minute; a 1° C. difference at the scene induces just a 0.03° C. or smaller difference at the sensor. The pixel response time is also fairly slow, in the range of tens of milliseconds.
An imaging TC resembles a VC in its top-level operation: it takes a series of snapshots or frames at a fixed rate. When a portable handheld TC is aimed at a steady object, it is nearly impossible to hold it in a hand perfectly steady that the image would remain unchanged from frame to frame as it would be the case when a tripod is employed. The image jitter is resulted from a natural tremor of the operator's hands or from the object motions. Further, when a relatively long exposure for each frame is used and the object moves, likely a single frame is composed of pixels that do not receive a steady photon flow over the time of the exposure. This leads to a blurry image. A blurry image further degrades a low-resolution image (fewer pixels). This especially is pronounced in TCs having a smaller optical system (a lens, e.g.) that collect less light. Thus, a signal-to-noise ratio at a sensor's pixel level is degraded which results in a noisy image. An example of a small lens in a TC is in a thermal imaging camera installed into a mobile communication device (a smartphone, e.g.).
To reduce noise, electrical signal may be subjected to special processing, for example, to averaging of frames during a specific time interval. This averaging while slowing down the TC camera operation, may significantly reduce noise. Yet, averaging of signals from a pixel loses its advantage if the pixel receives IR radiation from an unsteady object, that is, either from a moving object or a camera jitter while held by hands. Various solutions have been proposed to improve the TC image stability, such as a mechanical damping system as exemplified by the U.S. Pat. No. 7,767,963 issued to Fujii, that is incorporated herein as a reference.
Energy of a photon in the thermal IR spectral range is about 20 times smaller than in the visible range, thus the thermal detectors are much more susceptible to noise. Therefore, in many a TC and IRT, a longer exposure is often desirable to collect more photons and thus enhance the detector's response. Yet, as indicated above, a longer exposure suffers from the image jitter that should be compensated for.
In video and photo cameras, a technique of compensating the image jitter is called “digital image stabilization” (DIS). It's routinely employed in various camera designs and is well known in art. The DIS can be implemented in many versions, depending on the camera complexity and purpose (see for example www.dailyburrito.com/projects/DigitalImageStabilization.pdf). DIS usually produces high quality results in a VC whose images comprise millions of pixels. As a rule, DIS efficiency depends on the number of analyzed pixels. Unfortunately, in a TC a number of pixels is much smaller than in the VC. In fact, it can be as small as just one pixel (in the IRT), thus the algorithms employed in DIS are not effective and thus not practical for use in the TC or IRT.
The DIS for a VC image is a well developed art. The task of the DIS processing is to remove the involuntary image movement caused by, for example, unstable handshaking or vibration. This typically can be implemented in several versions that include shifting of an image sensor, shifting of an optical element in a lens and digital correction of the detected and converted signal. Using a DIS in a TS is much more difficult due to a several factors: larger lens sizes, larger detectors and a comparatively low spatial resolution.
Thus, it is an object of the present invention to provide a device that can stabilize the IR signal received by an IR detector.
It is another object to reduce effect of an IR image jitter on the signal processing;
And another goal of the present invention is to reduce noise in the detected IR signal.
Further and additional objects are apparent from the following discussion of the present invention and the preferred embodiments.
This patent teaches design and methods of reducing influence of instability of a thermal camera on the image quality. In one embodiment it is achieved by taking simultaneous images of the same object by both the thermal camera (TC) and visible or near-infrared camera (VC) having overlapping fields of view. An image from the VC is analyzed for shifts and a corrective signal related to the shift value and direction is generated. The signal is used for correcting the image processing from a TC. Another embodiments include a gyroscope or accelerometer to generate a corrective signal to an image produced by the TC.
In the foregoing description we use word “jitter” that means “irregular and unsteady motion”. The purpose of the embodiments of this invention is to reduce effects of “jitter” on quality of signals measured by a TC.
There are several ways of designing the shift detector, 17. One is to incorporate into it a gyroscope or accelerometer, 21, that may be sensitive to motions along the x, y and z axes and also to rotations (
Another embodiment of the shift detector, 17, is incorporation into it a digital image camera (VC), 2, operating in a visible and/or near IR spectral range (
Due to the device jitter or the object movement, the respective images of the object, 15, registered by the TC 4 and VC 2 will be shifted from frame to frame in the direction 20. Regarding the number of pixels, a shift for the same distance “d” will be different in the TC and VC because a VC has far more many pixels, 14, than the TS pixels, 29 (
Image Correction
A shift di for each frame i first should be measured by one of the methods described above. In other words, it may be computed from the signal generated by the accelerometer, 21, or from a digital image of VC, 2. This correcting signal representing the shift, d, (separately for each axis) can be used to shift the converted thermal image on the output device. 19, thus making it appear steady with less jitter and less blur. This method of shifting the TC pixels in response to the accelerometer, 21, or in relation to shifting the VC pixels can significantly enhance the displayed image quality.
Besides shifting pixels in the outputs device for steadying the image, to reduce noise a TC signal, processing may involve averaging of signals from the same pixel from frame to frame. However, for a simple averaging the result will be rather poor since the same pixel of various frames receives the IR radiation from different parts of the object. For example, such an averaging of a signal from the pixel, 22, will include a signal from an eye (
In the case when a longer exposure of a frame in the output means 19 is desirable, the TC and VC images still should be taken with a relatively fast frame rate, for example 32 frames per second (fps) for a further reduction. In the image processor 18, several frames should be averaged to reduce the displayed rate, for example from 32 to 8 fps, that is, by averaging n=4 sequential frames. Theoretically, this will reduce noise by 2 times. As indicated above, the averaging will be done on signals from the appropriate pixels that are selected according to the shift value di. A shift value di for each frame must be known from the shift detector, 17, for each direction of the shift.
In cases, when the computed shift di corresponds not to a whole number of the TC pixels, but rather to a whole number plus a fraction, for example to 3.4, the value of the detected photon flux that should be entered into the averaging computation, may be computed by anticipating a correct flux in that particular location. Estimation (anticipation) may be performed by several methods, for example from a linear extrapolation of signals from the neighboring TC pixels. This is illustrated in
IRT Correction
If the device is an infrared non-contact thermometer (IRT) being, for example, part of a smart telephone, either a built-in digital camera or imbedded accelerometer can provide correction for the jitter. As a rule, an IRT has only one pixel and thus the pixel shift as described above can't be employed. A mechanical shift of the focusing lens or shift of am IR detector also may be employed, but these solutions are rather cumbersome and expensive at the modern state of art and thus are not described here, however they are the embodiments of this invention. Below we consider a digital correction of the received IR signal.
Temperature measurement by a mobile communication device (smartphone, e.g.) is typically done from a forehead of a patient. An optical system of an IR sensor (lens 5) that is either imbedded into a smart phone or an external case (jacket) as a rule has a relatively narrow angle of view (20° of a solid angle, e.g.), thus it collects the IR photon flux that is substantially weaker if it were collected from a wider angle, say 60°. A smaller photon flux received from a narrow field of view means a diminished signal-to-noise ratio and thus an increased error of measurement. Even if the IR sensor response time is on the order of 10 ms, it would be highly desirable to conduct a measurement for a much longer time, for example 1 s to collect more IR photons in order to improve accuracy. For a mobile device IRT that is intended for a noncontact measurement of temperatures from an object surface, an uncontrollable hand tremor results in a random modulation of the photon flux.
Since the IRT detector as a rule comprises a single IR sensing pixel, a digital pixel shift technique as described above for the image correction can't be employed. Thus other methods of the jitter correction should be employed. In the following embodiment, a long exposure (t0=1 s, e.g.) of an IR sensitive pixel is replaced by a series of shorter exposures (t0=118 s, e.g.)—the frames.
For example, the following formula can be used for averaging signals from different frames:
where i is the frame number, n is total number of averaged frames, V0 is the IR signal from the initial frame, di is a shift of the i frame and dmax is the maximum permissible shift. Any shift greater than dmax is considered dmax.
It follows from the formula that for very small shifts (di→0), all frames will be nearly equally averaged. However, for a frame that deviates far (large d) from the initial frame (i=0), the contribution to the averaging will be very small. This technique is called a “weighted” averaging and its running value is illustrated by the line, 24, that is positioned closer to the ideal line, 29. Naturally, for a very shaky camera the averaging efficiency for a noise reduction will be diminished, but for a small jitter it will reduce noise significantly.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a number of preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the priority of provisional U.S. patent application Ser. No. 61/698,696 filed on 9 Sep. 2012. The disclosure of the prior related application is hereby fully incorporated by reference herein.