Claims
- 1. A collimating optical device, said device comprising:a body of light transmissive material, a light port adjacent a first surface of said body; a first reflector adjacent a second surface of said body, said second surface being opposite said first surface; a second reflector on said first surface of said body adjacent said port; said first reflector being substantially smaller than said second reflector and occupying substantially less than all of said second surface; said second surface being curved so as to retard the transmission of reflections therefrom back to said port; said first and second reflectors and said second surface being dimensioned and shaped to spread and collimate light beams received through said port and exiting said second surface.
- 2. A device as in claim 1 in which said second reflector is a concave surface substantially symmetrical about an optical axis from said inlet port to said first reflector, and said first reflector is a curved surface substantially symmetrical about said optical axis.
- 3. A device as in claim 2 in which said second surface is a convex surface of revolution about said optical axis.
- 4. A device as in claim 1 in which said reflectors are formed by reflective coatings on said first and second surfaces, and said second surface also bears an anti-reflective coating.
- 5. A device as in claim 1 in which said reflectors are aligned with one another with respect to an optical axis and are positioned with said first reflector displaced in a direction transverse to said axis from the portion of said second surface from which collimated beams emerge, and said inlet port is displaced in a direction transverse to said axis from the portion of said second reflector which receives and reflects light beams from said first reflector.
- 6. A fiber-optic cable terminus comprising:a housing having a receptacle for receiving one end of a fiber-optic cable and locating its light conductor at a source location; a second receptacle for receiving and holding a reflector unit having a light transmissive body having a light inlet port with said port located adjacent said source location, said port being located on a first surface of said body; a first reflector on a second surface of said body, said second surface being opposite said first surface; a second reflector on said first surface of said body adjacent said port; said first reflector being substantially smaller than said second reflector and occupying substantially less than all of said second surface; said second surface being curved so as to retard the transmission of reflections therefrom back to said port; said first and second reflectors and said second surface being dimensioned and shaped to spread and collimate light beams received through said port and exiting said second surface.
- 7. A device as in claim 6 in which said second reflector is a concave surface substantially symmetrical about an optical axis from said inlet port to said first reflector, and said first reflector is a curved surface substantially symmetrical about said optical axis.
- 8. A device as in claim 7 in which said second surface is a convex surface of revolution about said optical axis.
- 9. A device as in claim 6 in which said reflectors are formed by reflective coatings on said first and second surfaces, and said second surface also bears an anti-reflective coating.
- 10. A device as in claim 6 in which said reflectors are aligned with one another with respect to an optical axis and are positioned with said first reflector displaced in a direction transverse said axis from the portion of said second surface from which collimated beams emerge, and said inlet port is displaced in a direction transverse to said axis from the portion of said second reflector which receives and reflects light beams from said first reflector.
- 11. A fiber-optic cable terminus comprising:a housing having a receptacle for receiving one end of a fiber-optic cable and locating its light conductor at a source location; a second receptacle for receiving and holding a reflector unit having a light transmissive body having a light inlet port with said port located adjacent said source location, said port being located on a first surface of said body; a first reflector on a second surface of said body, said second surface being opposite said first surface; a second reflector on said first surface of said body adjacent said port; said first reflector being substantially smaller than said second reflector and occupying substantially less than all of said second surface; said second surface being curved so as to retard the transmission of reflections therefrom back to said port; said first and second reflectors and said second surface being dimensioned and shaped to spread and collimate light beams received through said port and exiting said second surface including releasable fastening means for fastening said terminus to a like terminus with the second wall of said reflector unit in one terminus facing but spaced from said second wall of said like terminus.
- 12. A transducer device, said device including:a transducer for converting one of electromagnetic radiation energy and electrical signal energy to the other type of energy; a light transmissive body having a first surface with an adjacent light port; a light port adjacent a first surface of said body; a first reflector on a second surface of said body, said second surface being opposite said first surface; a second reflector on said first surface of said body adjacent said port; said first reflector being substantially smaller than said second reflector and occupying substantially less than all of said second surface; said second surface being curved so as to retard the transmission of reflections therefrom back to said port; said first and second reflectors and said second surface being dimensioned and shaped to spread and collimate light beams received through said port and exiting said second surface; said transducer being located at said port.
Parent Case Info
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent applications Ser. No. 09/909,100, filed Jul. 19, 2001, and the U.S. patent application entitled “ELECTRO-OPTICAL TRANSDUCER”, filed Oct. 22, 2001. Priority also is claimed in this patent application from a provisional patent application entitled PROJECT CASTLE, Ser. No. 60/267,544, filed in the United States Patent and Trademark Office on Feb. 9, 2001.
US Referenced Citations (16)
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
“Modern Optical Engineering”, by Warren J. Smith—Section 13.5—pp. 3850-398 0 McGraw-Hill 1966. |
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60/267544 |
Feb 2001 |
US |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09/909100 |
Jul 2001 |
US |
Child |
10/016369 |
|
US |