1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a secured document, a process and a system making it possible to manufacture this document and means making it possible to read it.
2. Discussion of the Background
It is now relatively easy for forgers to reproduce conventional documents such as passports, identity card, identification badges.
The object of the invention is to make it difficult, or even virtually impossible, to reproduce and/or falsify such documents.
Securing documents (identity cards, passports, etc.) against counterfeiting and falsification is a fundamental problem which arises with all those involved in the field.
The restrictions which bear on the securing methods-are stringent. This is because these documents must be made with:
Processes for securing documents, for example by hologram, are known from documents U.S. Pat. No. 4,171,864, EP-A-0 283 233, GB-A-2 254 166, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,894,756 and 5,483,363, but these known processes do not offer strengthened security against counterfeiting.
Generally, the object of the invention is to produce, on the document to be protected, a characteristic hologram which is difficult to copy and moreover which carries printed data in a conventional manner on the document. Thus a verifying agent will be able to check the document by comparing the content of the hologram with the content of the rest of the document. For example, the hologram represents an image of the identity photo contained on the document. Comparing the image of the hologram with the image of the photo makes it possible to authenticate the document quickly and easily.
The invention therefore relates to a document comprising at least one drawing or data, made by deposition or inclusion of pigments or dyes which can be read optically, and a hologram made from a copy of said drawing or of said data, characterized in that the hologram comprises deformations introduced during its recording which makes the copy read from the drawing or said data different.
The invention also relates to a document security system, comprising a prerecorded or electrically controllable optical modulator in which the image of at least part of the document is recorded, said modulator being designed to be combined with a layer of photosensitive material, at least one first light source making it possible to transmit a first reference wave to the layer of photosensitive material and a second incident wave onto said modulator and giving rise to a third object wave which is transmitted to the layer of photosensitive material in order to interfere with the reference wave in this layer, characterized in that it comprises in the path of the first wave or of the second, means inducing scrambling in the hologram recorded in the layer of photosensitive material.
The invention also relates to a system for reading a document comprising a hologram containing an image of part of said document, said image being scrambled, characterized in that it comprises a device for correcting said scramblings, or revealer, said hologram being readable through the revealer.
The various objects and characteristics of the invention will become more clearly apparent in the following description given by way of example and in the appended figures which represent:
a and 1b, examples of documents secured according to the invention;
c, examples of hologram recording systems according to the invention;
An example of a document secured according to the invention will first of all be described with reference to
b shows a variant embodiment of
A support element 22 is coated on one of its faces with a layer of photosensitive material 21. An optical modulator 23, such as a transparent photographic support or a controllable modulator such as a liquid-crystal screen, is applied near to or in contact with the layer of photosensitive material.
Preferably, the modulator makes it possible to supply the contents (data or image) of part of the document to be secured. If this involves a prerecorded modulator of the transparency type, this part of the document is recorded in the modulator. If this involves a controllable modulator, the part of the document can be displayed using the control of the modulator.
The support element 22 is transparent at the recording wavelength. A mirror 24 is placed on the side opposite the photosensitive layer with respect to the modulator 23. A light beam R supplied by a source S1 and carrying a coherent wave illuminates the support element 22. By way of example, in
In this process, it is assumed that T is the transmission coefficient of the modulator and that O is the wave illuminating the hologram on the side opposite the beam R, which we will call reference wave R hereinafter.
The function recorded by the hologram comes from the interference between the reference wave R and the wave O˜R*T, the object wave from the transparency.
The hologram records R(R*T2)* i.e. RRT2.
If the hologram is thick, it will rediffract on reading the recorded image, for specified angles of incidence (Bragg effect) of the illumination wave and of the viewing direction.
The modulator can integrate a scattering function for improved reading of the hologram and in order to complicate any counterfeiting.
An illuminating reference wave R supplied by the source S1 is transmitted to the layer of photosensitive material 21 without passing through the modulator. An illumination wave I supplied by the source S2 illuminates the modulator 23 and is transmitted therethrough to the layer of photosensitive material (illumination wave O, O=IT). The two waves R and O interfere in the photosensitive material 21. Preferably, the two waves O and R are counterpropagating and are perpendicular to the plane of the layer of photosensitive material 21. Also, preferably, the two waves are coherent plane waves.
The function recorded by the hologram comes from interference between R, reference wave, and the object wave coming from the modulator illuminated by the plane wave I:O=IT.
The hologram records R* .I.T.
The thick hologram reilluminated by a plane wave R will diffract an image proportional to IT, that is to say, the image of the transparency, provided that I is of the plane wave type, like R.
As in
In the above, the recording of the hologram 21 has been carried out by placing thereagainst an optical modulator. It is also possible to design a recording system in which the modulator is illuminated by a wave I, which is modulated by the modulator and which supplies a wave O, as is shown in
b and 4c represent variants of recording systems in which the modulator is not placed against the hologram. As can be seen in
c shows the system of
Preferably, the images of the various modulators will be recorded separately. The image of the modulator 23 will be recorded when the modulators 27 and 28 are transparent or in the absence of these modulators. In order to record the image of an additional modulator, 27 for example, the modulator 23 will be made transparent (or removed) possibly together with the modulator 28.
It should be noted that the various holograms recorded using the various modulators can be recorded using different wavelengths insofar as the nature of the photosensitive layer 21 allows it. These holograms will then be reread using these various wavelengths.
The variant of
These additional modulators will make it possible to display either a specific motif logo) or data (a signature for example) of the document to be secured.
In order to induce a scattering effect and/or aberrations in the hologram, the means inducing the scattering and/or the aberration can be placed either in the path of the wave O or in the path of the wave R.
Thus, in
The modulator is also illuminated by R.eiφ and the object wave O is O=R*.e−iφT2. The hologram records R(.R*eiφT2)*, i.e. RRe2iφT2.
In reading mode, illuminated by R*, it diffracts a wave e2iφRT2 deformed with respect to RT2. The image appears scrambled to the observer. The observer can read normally only a deformed image. The deformation undergone by the image is twice that coming from the aberrator.
If the aberrator 25 is located on the modulator side with respect to the layer of photosensitive material, the hologram records R*.R.T2 e2iφ. This case is similar to the case of recording 2 waves treated below.
In
The aberrator is positioned, for example, in the path of the wave R. The aberrator introduces a local phase φ into the wave R, that is to say, it transforms it into R.eiφ.
The transparency is illuminated by a plane wave I. We therefore have O=IT.
The hologram records R*.eiφ IT.
In reading, reilluminated by R, it diffracts a wave eiφ IT deformed with respect to IT. The image appears scrambled to the observer, as above.
The deformation undergone by the image is the same as that coming from the aberrator.
Under these conditions, in order to be able to reread the images recorded using the systems of
For this purpose, according to the invention, an aberration-correcting device 27, which we will call a revealer 27, is placed (
The revealer induces a phase function the inverse of that of the aberrator, that is e−iφ, on the read wave.
The wave incident on the hologram is Re−iφ. Since the hologram has recorded R.Re2iφT2 it diffracts a wave proportional to T2.eiφthen passes back through the revealer which again induces e−iφ and thus the light wave coming from the revealer is proportional to T, that is to say corresponds to the undeformed image.
Therefore, with a recording such as that of
Where the aberrator has been positioned on the modulator side, the revealer is determined as in the two-wave case described below.
According to
The wave incident on the hologram is R.eiφ/2. Since the hologram has recorded R*ieiφT, it diffracts a wave proportional to T.eiφ/2 then passes back through the revealer which again induces e−iφ/2 and thus the light wave coming from the revealer is proportional to IT, that is to say it corresponds to the undeformed image.
Therefore with 2 wave recording: the aberrator induces φ and the revealer must induce −φ/2.
In order that the positioning of the revealer is not too critical, the aberrator must be chosen so as to noticeably modify the view of the image but with phase defect spatial frequencies on the scale of the positioning accuracy tolerated.
1°/ 1 or 2 wave recording can be carried out with any incident waves. The benefit is, inter alia, to separate the direction of observing the recorded image from the specular reflection. This configuration substantially improves the image contrast.
2°/ In
3°/ The aberrator and the revealer are two different phase functions. It is possible to use the same component for both functions by reilluminating the hologram not with R but with R*. In this case, the phase function recorded in the hologram is transformed into its conjugate by diffraction and self-corrects by passing through this same phase law. This is the principle of phase conjugation.
A hologram of this sort is thus made difficult to counterfeit by the presence of the aberrator during recording:
According to a variant embodiment (
To improve the protection against counterfeiting, it is proposed to use a variant of the photosensitive protection of a volume which consists of the superposition of several photosensitive functions, one of which contains the photo-type personalized data.
By way of example, the following combination is proposed:
In the case which is described in
To be visible, the photo contained in the component 21 requires the presence of the coding function of the component HS.
The grating function HS may simply be of the grating type with a fixed pitch or contain specific but not personalized data: it will therefore be identical for all the cards.
The benefit of the HS coding function resides in the fact that it endows the personalized hologram with specific optical properties colorimetry, multiple angular ranges of visibility as a function, for example, of the grating order number, etc.
The combination of the two components, photosensitive layer and grating HS (
The image recorded in the hologram 21 will be observed without distortion if the whole (21+HS) is illuminated by the wave Al.
Outside these observation conditions, the holographic image will change color with the appearance of distortions or will disappear depending on its geometrical characteristics (thickness and index variation), a simple Lipmann hologram does not show such distortions.
According to a variant of the system of
The relative positions of the hologram functions and of the grating HS can be exchanged as well as their kind and type of transmission or reflection.
Where transmission functions are combined, it is possible to add a high index treatment or a narrow spectral band reflector (which may or may not be photosensitive) to increase the readability of the data.
It should be noted that in the above, the photosensitive functions may be monochrome, dichrome or trichrome, etc., it is possible to adjust the colorimetry of the image for authentication with a given light source (natural, neon or other light) or code the data stored in one and the same layer in different colors.
The use of photosensitive material with swelling that can be spatially controlled by post-treatment makes it possible either to color-code a given motif superimposed on the personalized hologram, or to include another high-resolution function which can be seen with an additional source.
In addition, the hologram may be transparent to allow the reading of data located under the hologram, on the document.
The hologram can be read either by natural light, or by normal illumination, or using a lamp with a particular range of wavelengths.
It will generally be recalled that:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99 08958 | Jul 1999 | FR | national |
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/019,314 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,873,443 which is the National Stage of International Application No. PCT/FR00/01914, filed Jul. 4, 2000, and further is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the prior French Patent Application No. 99 08958, filed Jul. 9, 1999, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050052716 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10019314 | US | |
Child | 10971136 | US |