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| United States Patent Application |
20110241978
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Fergason; James L.
|
October 6, 2011
|
OPTICAL DISPLAY SYSTEM AND METHOD, ACTIVE AND PASSIVE DITHERING USING
BIREFRINGENCE, COLOR IMAGE SUPERPOSITIONING AND DISPLAY ENHANCEMENT WITH
PHASE COORDINATED POLARIZATION SWITCHING
Abstract
A display apparatus includes a passive display, a light source, and a
video signal input, in operation in response to a video signal the
passive display modulates light from the light source to provide an
image, and the intensity of the light source is controlled by the video
signal.
A method of producing a displayed image using a passive display
illuminated by a light source is characterized in controlling the light
source to obtain a displayed image with a desired amount of information,
gray scale and/or color characteristics.
A method of reducing power consumption by a display system in which a
light modulating display modulates incident light from a light source to
provide images is characterized in controlling power provided to the
light source to reduce output thereof for relatively dark images.
| Inventors: |
Fergason; James L.; (Menlo Park, CA)
|
| Assignee: |
FERGASON PATENT PROPERTIES, LLC
Menlo Park
CA
|
| Serial No.:
|
955777 |
| Series Code:
|
12
|
| Filed:
|
November 29, 2010 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
345/88; 345/89 |
| Class at Publication: |
345/88; 345/89 |
| International Class: |
G09G 3/36 20060101 G09G003/36 |
Claims
1-88. (canceled)
89. A display device for displaying an image having a low intended
brightness, the display device comprising: a display; an illuminating
light source; a computer control, wherein the computer control: receives
brightness information, and determines brightness and a range of grey
levels for the input image signal, and if an image corresponding to the
input image signal is a dim image of a low intended brightnes and low
contrast, increases the range of grey levels used to display the image on
the display corresponding to the input image signal, and decreases an
amount of light from the illuminating light source so as to alleviate any
decrease of brightness of the image which is caused by said increasing of
the range of grey levels performed such that the low intended brightness
of the image is preserved.
90. A display device for displaying an image having a low intended
brightness and an intended color balance, comprising: a display capable
of displaying an image within a predetermined range of gray levels; an
illuminating light source capable of producing at least three different
colors; and a computer control arranged for receiving an input image
signal, said image signal including color grey level information of an
image relating to the at least three different colors and a brightness
information of said image; wherein the computer control: receives said
brightness information and said color grey level information, and
determines a range of color grey levels for the input image signal;
changes the determined range of color grey levels to a second range of
color grey levels which is larger than said determined range of color
grey levels, if the brightness of said input image signal represents a
dim image of low brightness low contrast; and decreases an amount of
light from the illuminating light source if the brightness of the input
image signal represents said dim image, so as to reduce increase of
brightness of the image which is produced as a result of said change of
the range of color gray levels into said second range of color gray
levels, such that the low intended brightness and the intended color
balance of the image is preserved.
91. A display device for displaying an image having a high intended
brightness or a low intended brightness and an intended color balance,
comprising: a display capable of displaying an image within a
predetermined range of grey levels; an illuminating light source capable
of producing at least three different least colors; and a computer
control arranged for receiving an input image signal, said image signal
including color grey level information and the brightness information of
said image by color component; wherein the computer control: receives
said brightness information and said color grey level information, and
determines a range of gray levels for the input image signal; changes the
determined range of grey levels to a second range of gray levels which is
larger than said determined range of grey levels, if the brightness of
said input image signal represents a high brightness image of high
intended brightness with low contrast or a dim image of low intended
brightness with low contrast; increases an amount of light from the
illuminating light source if the brightness of the input image signal
represents said high brightness image, so as to reduce decrease of
brightness of the image which is produced as a result of said change of
the range of gray levels into said second gray levels such that the high
intended brightness of the image is preserved and the intended color
balance of the at least three different colors is preserved; and
decreases an amount of light from the illuminating light source if the
brightness of the input image signal represents said dim image, so as to
reduce the increase of brightness of the image which is produced as a
result of said change of the range of gray levels into said second gray
levels such that the low intended brightness of the image is preserved
and the intended color balance among the three different colors is
preserved.
92. A method of controlling contrast of an image having a low intended
brightness displayed by a display apparatus capable of displaying an
image within a predetermined range of grey levels, the display apparatus
including an illuminating light source and a computer control, the method
comprising: processing brightness information of an input image signal
and determining brightness and a range of grey levels for the input image
signal; and if the image corresponding to the input image signal is a dim
image of a low brightness and low contrast, changing the determined range
of grey levels to a second range of grey levels greater than the
determined range of grey levels; and decreasing the amount of light from
the illuminating light source so as to alleviate any increase of
brightness of the image which is caused by performing the control of
changing the range of grey levels to the second range of grey levels,
such that the low intended brightness of the image is preserved.
93. A method of controlling contrast of an image displayed by a display
apparatus capable of performing color display within a predetermined
range of grey levels, the display apparatus including an illuminating
light source and a computer control, the method comprising: processing
brightness information of an input image signal to determine a range of
grey levels for an image corresponding to said input image signal and to
determine whether the image corresponding to the input image signal is a
bright image of a high brightness and low contrast or a dim image of a
low brightness and low contrast; and controlling contrast by; increasing
the determined range of grey levels toward a darker side if the image
corresponding to the input image signal is a bright image of a high
brightness and low contrast, increasing the determined range of grey
levels toward a brighter side if the image corresponding to the input
image signal is a dim image of a low brightness and low contrast; and
adjusting the amount of light from the illuminating light source by
increasing the amount of light from the illuminating light source, if the
input signal corresponds to a bright image, and decreasing the amount of
light from the illuminating light source, if the input signal corresponds
to a dim image.
94. A method of controlling contrast of an image displayed by a display
apparatus capable of displaying an image within a predetermined range of
grey levels, the display apparatus including an illuminating light source
and a computer control, the method comprising: processing brightness
information of an input image signal and determining brightness and a
range of grey levels for the input image signal to determine if the image
corresponding to the input image signal is a dim image of a low
brightness and low contrast; and if the image corresponding to the input
image signal is a dim image of a low brightness and low contrast,
changing the determined range of grey levels to a second range of grey
levels which is expanded greater than said determined range of grey
levels toward a brighter side, and decreasing the amount of light from
the illuminating light source.
95. A display device for displaying an image, comprising: a display
capable of displaying an image within a predetermined range of grey
levels; an illuminating light source; a computer control, wherein the
computer control: receives brightness information, and determines
brightness and a range of grey levels for the input image signal to
determine if the image corresponding to the input image signal is a dim
image of a low brightness and low contrast, and if an image corresponding
to the input image signal is a dim image of a low brightness and low
contrast, increases the range of grey levels used to display the image on
the display corresponding to the input image signal to have the range of
grey levels expanded greater than the determined range of grey levels
toward a brighter side, and decreases an amount of light from the
illuminating light source.
96. A method of controlling contrast of a display image of a display
apparatus including an illuminating light source, the method comprising:
processing pixel information and determining a range of gray levels used
for an input signal; and adjusting an amount of light from the
illuminating light source and changing the range of gray levels used to
display an image corresponding to the input signal.
97. The method of claim 96, wherein the pixel information includes
brightness information.
98. The method of claim 96, wherein the pixel information includes color
information.
99. The method of claim 96, wherein changing the range includes
increasing the range.
100. The method of claim 96, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes decreasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal is a dim image.
101. The method of claim 96, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illumination light source includes increasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal is a bright image.
102. The method of claim 96, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes decreasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal has a brightness below a
predetermined level.
103. The method of claim 96, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes increasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal has a brightness above a
predetermined level.
104. The method of claim 96, wherein the illuminating light source emits
a plurality of colors, the plurality of colors including at least one of
red, green or blue.
105. The method of claim 96, wherein the illuminating light source
includes multiple a number of light emitting diodes emitting a plurality
of colors.
106. The method of claim 105, wherein the light emitting diodes provide
light combinable to provide white light.
107. The method of claim 96, further comprising measuring brightness of
ambient environment of the display and further adjusting the amount of
light from the illuminating light source and changing the range of the
gray levels based on the brightness of the ambient environment.
108. A method of controlling contrast of a display image of a display
including an illuminating light source having a plurality of color
components, the method comprising: processing pixel brightness and color
information and determining a range of gray levels by color used for an
input signal; and adjusting an amount of light from the color components.
109. The method of claim 108, further comprising changing the range of
gray levels for the color components used to display an image
corresponding to the input signal.
110. The method of claim 109, wherein changing the range of gray levels
is synchronous with the adjusting the amount of light from the color
components.
111. The method of claim 108, wherein the illuminating light source
includes a plurality of light sources of different colors.
112. The method of claim 108, wherein the illuminating light sources
includes light emitting diodes of different colors.
113. A display device for displaying an image, comprising: a display; an
illuminating light source; a processor for receiving an input signal
including pixel information and for determining a range of gray levels
used for the input signal and for adjusting a range of the gray levels
used to display an image on the display corresponding to the input
signal.
114. The device of claim 113, wherein the pixel information includes
brightness information.
115. The device of claim 113, wherein the pixel information includes
color information.
116. The device of claim 113, wherein changing the range includes
increasing the range.
117. The device of claim 113, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes decreasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal is a dim image.
118. The device of claim 113, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illumination light source includes increasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal is a bright image.
119. The device of claim 113, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes decreasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal has a brightness below a
predetermined level.
120. The device of claim 113, wherein adjusting the amount of light from
the illuminating light source includes increasing the amount of light if
the image corresponding to the input signal has a brightness above a
predetermined level.
121. The device of claim 113, wherein the illuminating light source emits
a plurality of colors, the plurality of colors including at least one of
red, green or blue.
122. The device of claim 113, wherein the illuminating light source
includes a number of different color light emitting diodes.
123. The device of claim 122, wherein the light emitting diodes provide
light combinable to provide white light.
124. The device of claim 123, wherein the light source includes a
plurality of light emitting diodes that provide light combinable to
provide white light.
125. The device of claim 123, further comprising a brightness detector
for measuring a brightness of an ambient environment of the display, the
processor receiving the brightness measurement and further adjusting the
amount of light from the illuminating light source and changing the range
of the gray levels based on the brightness of the ambient environment.
Description
[0001] This is a continuation of co-pending, commonly owned U.S. patent
application Ser. No. 11/892,310, filed Aug. 21, 2007, which is a
continuation of commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No.
10/983,403, filed Nov. 8, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,352,347; which is a
continuation of commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No.
09/676,915, filed Oct. 2, 2000; which is a continuation of commonly owned
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/817,846, filed Apr. 25, 1997 now U.S.
Pat. No. 6,184,969; which is the National Stage of International
Application No. PCT/US95/13722, filed Oct. 25, 1995, which claims benefit
under 35 USC .sctn.119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No.
60/001,972, filed Jul. 23, 1995 and which is a continuation-in-part of
commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/398,292, filed Mar. 3,
1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,715,029; which is a continuation-in-part of
commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/392,055, filed Feb.
22, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,572,341; which is a continuation-in-part of
commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/328,375, filed Oct.
25, 1994, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,537,256; all of which hereby are
incorporated by reference for all purposes as set forth herein.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENTS AND PATENT APPLICATIONS
[0002] Reference is made to commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser.
No. 08/187,262, filed Jan. 25, 1994 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,717,422 issued
Feb. 10, 1998); Ser. No. 08/187,050, filed Jan. 25, 1994 (now U.S. Pat.
No. 5,532,854, issued Jul. 2, 1996); Ser. No. 08/187,163, filed Jan. 25,
1994; Ser. No. 08/275,907, filed Jul. 5, 1994 (now U.S. Pat. No.
5,519,524, issued May 21, 1996), Ser. No. 08/328,375, filed Oct. 25, 1994
(now U.S. Pat. No. 5,537,256, issued Jul. 16, 1996); Ser. No. 08/392,055,
filed Feb. 22, 1995 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,572,341, issued Nov. 5, 1996);
Ser. No. 08/398,292, filed Mar. 3, 1995 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,715,029,
issued Feb. 3, 1998); Ser. No. 08/295,383, filed Aug. 24, 1994 (now U.S.
Pat. No. 5,621,572, issued Apr. 15, 1997); Ser. No. 08/328,371, filed
Oct. 25, 1994 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,858,589, issued Sep. 15, 1998); Ser.
No. 08/383,466, filed Feb. 3, 1995 (now U.S. Pat. No. 5,606,458, issued
Feb. 5, 1997); and provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/002,780
entitled Optical system and method for a head mounted display providing
both front and peripheral fields of view and Ser. No. 60/002,779 entitled
Monocular viewing device with retroreflector display system,
telecommunication system, and method, both filed Jul. 19, 1995. The
entire disclosures thereof hereby are incorporated by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELD
[0003] The present invention relates generally, as is indicated, to
optical display system and method, active and passive dithering using
birefringence, color image superpositioning, and display enhancement with
phase coordinated polarization switching. The present invention also
relates to dithering systems for optical displays and methods, and, more
particularly, to passive dithering systems and methods for changing the
location of an optical signal and for improving an optical display. The
present invention also relates to the enhancing of optical displays and
methods to enhance such displays, and, more particularly, to enhancing
optical displays and methods by coordinating the phase of switching light
with the dynamic operation of the displayed image developing device.
BACKGROUND
[0004] Dithering systems have been used in a number of technologies in the
past. The objective of a dithering system is to change a characteristic
of a particular signal in a periodic (or random) fashion in order to
provide a useful output. As is described in further detail, the dithering
system of the invention may be used to change the relative location of an
optical signal.
[0005] The present invention may be used with various types of displays
and systems. Exemplary displays are a CRT (sometimes referred to herein
as cathode ray tube) display, a liquid crystal display (sometimes
referred to herein as "LCD"), especially those which modulate light
transmitted therethrough, reflective liquid crystal displays, light
emitting displays, such as electroluminescent displays, plasma displays
and so on.
[0006] Conventional optical displays typically display graphic visual
information, such as computer generated graphics, and pictures generated
from video signals, such as from a VCR, from a broadcast television
signal, etc.; the pictures may be static or still or they may be moving
pictures, as in a movie or in a cartoon, for example. Conventional
displays also may present visual information of the alphanumeric type,
such as numbers, letters, words, and/or other symbols (whether in the
English language or in another language). Visual information viewed by a
person (or by a machine or detector) usually is in the form of visible
light. Such visible light is referred to as a light signal or an optical
signal. The term optical signal with which the invention may be used
includes visible light, infrared light, and ultraviolet light, the latter
two sometimes being referred to as electromagnetic radiation rather than
light. The optical signal may be in the form of a single light ray, a
light beam made up of a plurality of light rays, a light signal such as a
logic one or a logic zero signal used in an optical computer, for
example, or the above-mentioned alphanumeric or graphics type display.
Thus, as the invention is described herein, it is useful with optical
signals of various types used for various purposes. Therefore, in the
present invention reference to optical signal, light ray, light beam,
light signal, visual information, etc., may be used generally
equivalently and interchangeably.
[0007] In an exemplary liquid crystal display sometimes referred to as an
image source, there usually are a plurality of picture elements,
sometimes referred to as pixels or pels, and these pixels can be
selectively operated to produce a visual output in the form of a picture,
alphanumeric information, etc. Various techniques are used to provide
signals to the pixels. One technique is to use a common electrode on one
plate of a liquid crystal cell which forms the display and an active
matrix electrode array, such as that formed by thin film transistors
(TFT), on the other plate of the liquid crystal cell. Various techniques
are used to provide electrical signals to the TFT array to cause a
particular type of optical output from respective pixels. Another
technique to provide signals to the pixels is to use two arrays of
crossed electrodes on respective substrates of an LCD; by applying or not
applying a voltage or electric field between a pair of crossed
electrodes, a particular optical output can be obtained.
[0008] One factor in determining resolution of a liquid crystal display is
the number of pixels per unit area of the liquid crystal display. For
example, Sony Corporation recently announced a 1.35 inch diagonal high
resolution liquid crystal display which has 513,000 pixels arranged in
480 rows of 1,068 pixels per row.
[0009] Another factor affecting resolution is the space between adjacent
pixels sometimes referred to "as optical dead space". Such space
ordinarily is not useful to produce an optical signal output. The space
usually is provided to afford a separation between the adjacent pixels to
avoid electrical communication between them. The space also is provided
to accommodate circuitry, leads, and various electrical components, such
as capacitors, resistors, and even transistors or parts of transistors.
The proportion of optical dead space to useful space of pixels that can
produce optical output tends to increase as the physical size of the
image source is decreased, for the space required to convey electrical
signals, for example, may remain approximately constant although the
actual size of the useful space of the pixels to produce optical output
can be reduced because of anticipated image magnification. However, upon
magnification of the image produced by such a miniature image source both
the optical dead space and the useful optical space of the pixels are
magnified. Thus, resolution tends to be decreased, especially upon such
magnification.
[0010] The picture elements (pixels or pels) may be discrete pixels,
blocks or areas where an optical signal can be developed by emission,
reflection, transmission, etc. such as the numerous pixels in the
miniature image source of Sony Corporation mentioned above. The optical
signal referred to may mean that light is "on" or provided as an output
from the device, or that the pixel has its other condition of not
producing or providing a light output, e.g., "off"; and the optical
signal also may be various brightnesses of light or shades of gray.
Alternatively, the optical output or optical signal produced by a pixel
may be a color or light of a particular color.
[0011] The pixels may be a plurality of blocks or dots arranged in a
number of lines or may be a number of blocks or dots randomly located or
grouped in a pattern on the display or image source (source of the
optical signal). The pixels may be a number of lines or locations along
the raster lines that are scanned in a CRT type device or the pixels may
be one or a group of phosphor dots or the like at particular locations,
such as along a line in a CRT or other device. The optical signal
produced by one or more pixels may be the delivery of light from that
pixel or the non-delivery of light from that pixel, or various
brightnesses or shades of gray. To obtain operation of a pixel, for
example, the pixel may be energized or not. In some devices energizing
the pixel may cause the pixel to provide a light output, and in other
devices the non-energizing of the pixel may cause the providing of a
light output; and the other energized condition may cause the opposite
light output condition. It also is possible that the nature of the light
output may be dependent on the degree of energization of a pixel, such as
by providing the pixel with a relatively low voltage or relatively high
voltage to obtain respective optical output signals (on and off or off
and on, respectively).
[0012] For example, in a conventional twisted nematic liquid crystal
display device, polarized light is received by a liquid crystal cell, and
depending on whether the liquid crystal cell receives or does not receive
a satisfactory voltage input, the plane of polarization of the light
output by the liquid crystal cell will or will not be rotated; and
depending on that rotation (or not) and the relative alignment of an
output analyzer, light will be transmitted or not. In an optical phase
retardation device that has variable birefringence, such as those
disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,385,806, 4,540,243, and RE. 32,521
(sometimes referred to as surface mode liquid crystal cells), depending
on the optical phase retardation provided by the liquid crystal cell,
plane polarized light may be rotated, and the optical output can be
determined as a function of the direction of the plane of polarization.
In a CRT light emission or not and brightness may be determined by
electrons incident on a phosphor at a pixel. In electroluminescent
displays and plasma displays light output may be determined by electrical
input at respective areas on pixels.
[0013] The interlacing of raster lines or display lines is a known
practice used in television and in other types of display systems. For
example, in NTSC and PAL television type cathode ray tube (CRT) displays
it is known that two interlaced fields of horizontal lines are used to
provide an entire image frame. First one raster or set of lines is
scanned to cause one subframe (sometimes referred to as field) to be
displayed; and then a second raster or set of lines is scanned to cause a
second subframe (field) to be displayed. The electrical signals used to
scan one line in one subframe and the electrical signals used to scan the
relatively adjacent line of the subsequent subframe may be different,
and, therefore, the optical outputs of those lines may be different. The
two raster subframes are presented sufficiently fast that the eye of an
observer usually cannot distinguish between the respective images of the
two successive subframes but rather integrates the two subframes to see a
composite image (sometimes referred to as a frame or picture). The two
subframes are created sequentially by "writing" the image to respective
pixels formed by phosphors to which an electron beam may be directed in
response to electrical signals which control the electron beam in on-off
and/or intensity manner. After the electron beam has reached the end of
its scanning to create one subframe, e.g., the last pixel or phosphor dot
area of that field, there is a period of time while the electron beam is
moved or directed to the first pixel of the next subframe. During that
period of time a blanking pulse is provided to prevent electrons from
being directed to phosphors or pixels causing undesired light emission.
Sometimes various circuits of a television or CRT display are
synchronized to the operative timing of the television, CRT, etc. by
synchronization with such blanking pulses.
[0014] The density of pixels, e.g., number of pixels per unit area, in a
CRT display usually is, in a sense, an analog function depending on
characteristics of the electron beam, drive and control circuitry for the
beam, phosphor dot layout, shadow mask(s), etc., as is known. Usually a
CRT is driven using the interlaced lines forming the subframes mentioned
above. In an LCD, though, there is a fixed number of pixels per line or
row; and data, e.g., whether a given pixel in a row is to transmit light
or to block light transmission, usually is written to the pixels a row at
a time. The data is written to one row, then to the next, and so on, and
there usually is no interlacing of rows or of subframes as there is in
CRT driving techniques.
[0015] In some LCD's the two subframes mentioned above usually are
effectively averaged together, when driven by a CRT type of interlaced
signal, since there usually is no physical interlacing of LCD pixels to
form respective subframes as there are respective scan lines of phosphor
dots, for example, in a CRT. Rather, the electrical signals for driving
adjacent scan lines of different respective interlaced subframes of a CRT
display, both usually are delivered to only a single row of pixels in an
LCD. Each pixel responds to the electrical signal applied thereto to
transmit or to block light, for example. Those two sets of electrical
signals are applied to the row of pixels at different times. Therefore,
at one time a given row of LCD pixels may present as an optical output
optical information from one subframe and at a later time present optical
information from the other subframe.
[0016] Since the optical information presented in one subframe is expected
to be displaced in space from the optical information presented in the
other subframe to obtain the interlacing pattern of a CRT display,
careful examination of the optical output from the above-mentioned LCD
will show an amount of "jittering" of the image. This jittering is caused
by the pixels of one row periodically being changed so the optical output
thereof sequentially displays the result of energization by signals
representing one scan line of information from one subframe and then
energization by electrical signals representing the adjacent scan line of
information from the next subframe.
[0017] This jittering can degrade the displayed image and can make viewing
uncomfortable. Also, the problems, such as viewing discomfort and/or
image degrading, caused by jittering tend to increase as the image is
enlarged or magnified, e.g., when the image is created by a relatively
miniature image source, such as the SONY display mentioned above, and is
magnified for direct viewing or for projection by a projector.
[0018] One technique for reducing the jittering is to use relatively slow
liquid crystal display devices. Therefore, the liquid crystal display
element or pixel tends to average the electrical signals applied thereto.
A disadvantage to this technique, though, is that image resolution is
reduced because the information representing two scan lines is combined
into a single line. Also, a slow acting liquid crystal display element
tends to have undesirable hysteresis that slows motion being shown by the
display.
[0019] In a color display, such as a LCD (liquid crystal display), there
usually are red, green and blue pixels which form a color triad
(hereinafter referred to as triad). By operating the LCD in such a way
that one or more of the pixels forming a triad provides (or produces) the
respective color light of that pixel, different respective colors and
white can be produced as output light. For example, if the red pixel of a
triad were providing red output light; and the green and blue pixels were
not providing output light, the light output from that triad would be
red. Further, when two or more pixels of a triad are providing light
output, a combination of those colors is seen by a person viewing
(sometimes referred to as the viewer) the light output or image. The
viewer usually visually superimposes the output light from the pixels of
the triad; and the combined or superimposed lights therefrom provide the
net effect or integrated light output of the triad. As an example, to
produce a white light output from a triad, the red, green and blue pixels
of that triad would provide, respectively, red, green and blue light; and
those lights would be, in effect, superimposed by the viewer and seen as
white light.
[0020] There is a continuing need and/or desire to improve resolution of
displays. It also would be desirable to facilitate the placing of
circuitry in a display while minimizing the optical dead space caused by
the circuitry. There also is a need to reduce jitter.
[0021] In the above-mentioned patent applications are disclosed techniques
for actively dithering, moving an optical signal, changing the location
or optical path of an optical signal, etc. for several purposes, such as
to increase resolution, to reduce jitter, and so on. There also are
disclosed techniques for passive dithering, moving of optical signals,
etc., for example to increase the fill factor of an image provided by a
display by expanding the image or pixels forming the image.
[0022] An LCD using the twisted nematic effect usually cannot switch
between transmission states as rapidly as changes occur in the applied
electrical signal which operates the LCD. For example, the electrical
input to a twisted nematic LCD can change nearly instantly, but it takes
a number of milliseconds for the LCD to respond dynamically to the change
in electrical input to change the optical response of the LCD. When an
LCD is used in a display system that employs dithering to double,
quadruple or otherwise to change the effective number of pixels, for
convenience hereinafter, sometimes referred to as optical line doubling
(or OLD), the relatively slow response of the twisted nematic LCD
compared to the faster operation of the dithering optics can result in an
optical output that does not achieve the desired improvement in
resolution or other optical effect.
[0023] The displaying of a dark scene using a display device (sometimes
referred to as a passive display), which modulates light received from a
separate light source, encounters a disadvantage which ordinarily is not
present for displays which produce their own light, such as a cathode ray
tube (CRT). The problem has to do with reduced resolution and/or contrast
of the displayed image.
[0024] In a CRT, for example, when it is desired to display a dark scene,
the intensity of the output light can be reduced. The different parts of
the dark scene, then, all may be output at the reduced brightness or
illuminance level. All pixels (e.g., picture elements, phosphor dots in a
monochrome display or group of three red, green and blue phosphor dots
for a multicolor display, etc.) of the CRT can be active so that
resolution is maintained even though intensity of the light produced by
the phosphors is reduced.
[0025] However, in a passive display device, such as a liquid crystal
display, an electrochromic display, etc., whether of the light
transmitting type or of the light reflecting type, the usual practice to
reduce brightness of a displayed image or scene is to reduce the number
of pixels which are transmitting light at a particular moment. Such a
reduction reduces the resolution of the display. Also, such a reduction
can reduce the contrast of the display.
[0026] The human eye has difficulty distinguishing between seeing or
recognizing the difference between low and high brightness and contrast
ranges. This difficulty is increased when the number of pixels is
decreased and resolution is degraded.
[0027] It would be desirable to improve the contrast and resolution of
passive displays.
[0028] In U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/187,163 is disclosed a
passive apparatus, such as an LCD, and method for displaying images with
high contrast by controlling the light input to the display to control
brightness of the output while operating respective pixels of the display
to obtain good contrast substantially without regard to the output
brightness. Different color effects also are disclosed using, for
example, field sequential switching of respective color light. However,
this is another example of a passive optical device, in this case an LCD,
in which field sequential switching could be improved if coordinated with
the delays inherent in the dynamic optical response of a liquid crystal
cell, for example, relative to the changes in operating signal, such as
electric field, voltage, etc.
[0029] As is described in application Ser. No. 08/187,163, an image of a
candlelit room would be dim. In the prior art devices a relatively small
number of pixels would be used, then, to transmit light to create the
image, whereas a relatively large number of pixels would be used to block
light transmission to give the effect of the reduced intensity or dim
room. In the invention of such application, though, the number of pixels
used to create the image remains constant, and the contrast ratio between
one portion and another portion of the image remain constant; only the
intensity of the illuminating light changes thereby to diminish the
brightness of the room. Therefore, with the invention image data is not
lost regardless of the brightness of the image, whereas in the prior art
image data is lost because the additional pixels are used to brighten or
darken the brightness of the image.
[0030] The features of the invention as described in that patent
application can be used in a frame sequential basis. The features of the
invention can be used regardless of whether the display is operated in
reflective mode or in transmissive mode. Also, the features of the
invention can be used in a virtual reality type display in order to
provide a very wide range of contrast and of image brightness
characteristics. The picture information is used to derive the brightness
of the display, not the surrounding ambient. Using the invention of that
application, the amount of information that can be conveyed by the
display is substantially increased over the prior art.
[0031] For example, if there were a grey scale of 100 shades of grey and a
display with 10 shades of grey, the intensity of the illuminating source
can be changed at 10 different levels, for example, and there also can be
10 different shades of grey provided by the display itself. Therefore,
this provides 100 shades of grey. This characteristic can be increased by
another factor of 10 by going to r, g, b (red, green, blue) modulation on
a field sequential basis, which allows the possibility of 10 to the 6th
different illumination levels and colors. The foregoing is especially
important in head mounted displays where immersion in the image is
extremely important. Using features of such patent application, there can
be high illumination of the scene, then, the grey scale contrast ratio of
the real image can be adjusted. As a result, there is a high contrast
image presented in a bright motif. Another example using such invention
is the ability to display a sunrise scene in which the red image is
enhanced and the blue and green are minimized.
[0032] The invention of that application, then, can separate the two
functions of brightness and image. The image is a function of the
operation of the liquid crystal modulator and the illumination brightness
is the function of the light source intensity. The r, g, b colors can be
changed to give a candlelight or moonlight effect with good resolution
and color function, but the brightness of the scene is a function of the
background. As a result, it is possible to p
hotograph the scene in
daylight to get good contrast; and then by reducing the display
illumination it is possible to give the impression of a moonlit or
candlelit environment.
SUMMARY
[0033] With the foregoing in mind, then, one aspect of the invention is to
increase the resolution of a display by electro-optically dithering an
optical signal.
[0034] Another aspect relates to use of electro-optical dithering to
obtain three dimensional images, especially using auto-stereoscopic
effect.
[0035] Another aspect relates to using electro-optical dithering to effect
beam switching of optical signals.
[0036] Another aspect is electro-optically to change selectively the
location at which an optical output signal is presented to another
location. A further aspect is to effect such change in more than one
direction, e.g., along more then one axis.
[0037] According to another aspect, a device for changing or determining
the location of an optical signal includes birefringent means for
selectively refracting light based on optical polarization characteristic
of the light, and means for changing such optical polarization
characteristic of light, the birefringent means and the changing means
being cooperative selectively to change the location of the optical
signal.
[0038] According to another aspect, a system for increasing the resolution
of an optical display having a plurality of picture elements includes
birefringent means for selectively refracting light based on polarization
characteristics of the light, changing means for selectively changing the
polarization characteristics of light, and the birefringent means and the
changing means being in optical series and cooperative in response to
selective operation of the changing means to change the location of
output optical signals therefrom.
[0039] According to another aspect, a display system includes a display
for producing visual output information by selective operation of a
plurality of picture elements at respective locations, and means for
changing the location of the output information as a function of optical
polarization thereby effectively to increase the number of picture
elements.
[0040] According to another aspect, a display system includes a display
for producing visual output information by selective operation of a
plurality of picture elements at respective locations, and means for
changing the location of the output information without physical
realignment of a mechanical device thereby effectively to increase the
number of picture elements.
[0041] According to another aspect, a display system includes a display
for producing visual output information by selective operation of a
plurality of picture elements at respective locations, and means for
electro-optically changing the location of the output information thereby
effectively to increase the number of picture elements.
[0042] According to another aspect, a method for displaying visual
information includes presenting a first optical output from a source by
providing plural optical signals arranged in a pattern, presenting a
second optical output from the source by providing plural optical signals
arranged in a pattern, and selectively shifting the location of the
pattern of the second optical output relative to the location of the
pattern of the first optical output based on optical polarization.
[0043] According to another aspect, an electro-optical dithering system
for shifting polarized light includes birefringent means for selectively
refracting light as a function of a polarization characteristic of the
light, and changing means for changing the polarization characteristic of
polarized light to provide output light that is shifted or not as a
function of optical polarization.
[0044] According to another aspect, a method of making a display includes
positioning in optical series an image source, a birefringent means for
selectively refracting light based on optical polarization characteristic
of the light, and a changing means for changing such optical polarization
characteristic.
[0045] Using principles of the invention, the location of an optical
signal can be changed, and the change can be used for a number of
purposes. For example, the change can be used to improve resolution of a
display, to provide an auto-stereoscopic output, to interlace optical
signals, to facilitate positioning and hiding of circuitry used in a
display, to facilitate overlapping of tiles or pixels in a display, etc.
A number of these examples are presented below. The invention may be used
to achieve one or more of those and other uses.
[0046] An aspect of the invention relates to an optical line increaser,
wherein the number of pixels in a optical display can be increased by
electro-optical means.
[0047] An aspect of the invention relates to an optical line increaser,
wherein the number of pixels in a optical display can be increased by
electro-optical means, for example, to double, triple, quadruple, or
otherwise to increase the effective number of pixels presenting output
optical information for viewing by a person, machine, other device, etc.,
and/or for other use.
[0048] Another aspect is to hide or to reduce optical dead space in a
display.
[0049] Another aspect is to use a switchable electro-optical device to
effect dithering (changing effective location) of an optical signal.
[0050] Another aspect is to reduce jitter in an optical display.
[0051] Another aspect is to drive a non-interlaced display using an
interlaced signal and electro-optically dithering the optical output of
the display to reduce jitter.
[0052] Another aspect is to increase the effective number of pixels and/or
lines of an optical display.
[0053] In accordance with a further aspect of the invention, a passive
dithering display system includes an optical display including a
plurality of pixels with optical dead space between the pixels for
producing an image, and a birefringent material for shifting one
polarization component of the image relative to a second polarization
component of the image such that the shifted polarization component lies
in the dead space.
[0054] In accordance with another aspect, a display system includes an
optical display for producing an image and a first birefringent material
for refracting one component of the image relative to a second component
of the image based on polarization characteristics of the components to
produce a plurality of adjacent images.
[0055] In accordance with a still further aspect of the invention, a
method of reducing optical background noise includes the steps of
displaying a plurality of pixels with optical dead space between said
pixels for producing an image and shifting one polarization component of
the image relative to a second polarization component of the image such
that the shifted polarization component lies in the dead space.
[0056] Another aspect relates to expanding an image or pixels of an image
to increase the fill factor of the image, the fill factor relating to the
amount of area of the image actually occupied by image compared to that
part of the image occupied by optical dead space.
[0057] Another aspect relates to using passive image or pixel expanding to
increase the fill factor of an image.
[0058] Another aspect relates to using active image or pixel doubling (or
other increasing) to increase fill factor and resolution of an image.
[0059] Another aspect relates to techniques to superimpose color pixel
image light outputs to obtain respective color outputs for a display.
[0060] Another aspect is to increase the amount of data able to be
displayed from a video signal or the like provided to a display system,
such as an LCD display system or other display system.
[0061] As is described further below, the invention is useful to
coordinate light output by an optical device, such as an LCD, for
example, and the dynamic operation of such optical device with another
optical device, such as one that switches or shifts the location of the
output light for use, such as viewing, projection, etc., one that
displays images in field (sometimes referred to as frame or part of a
frame) sequential operation to present images with good contrast and/or
color effect that are independent of the brightness of the output light,
and so on.
[0062] One or more of these and other objects, features and advantages of
the present invention are accomplished using the invention described and
claimed below.
[0063] To the accomplishment of the foregoing and related ends, the
invention, then, comprises the features hereinafter fully described and
particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and the
annexed drawings set forth in detail certain illustrative embodiments of
the invention. These embodiments are indicative, however, of but a few of
the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be
employed.
[0064] Although the invention is shown and described with respect to
certain preferred embodiments, it is obvious that equivalents and
modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading
and understanding of the specification. The present invention includes
all such equivalents and modifications, and is limited only by the scope
of the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0065] In the annexed drawings:
[0066] FIG. 1 is a schematic side elevation view of a CRT display
including an electro-optical dithering system according to the present
invention;
[0067] FIG. 2 is a schematic illustration of the components of the
electro-optical dithering system of FIG. 1;
[0068] FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of the double refraction effect
through a calcite crystal which may be used in the electro-optical
dithering system of the invention;
[0069] FIGS. 4A, 4B and 4C are, respectively, schematic illustrations
indicating exemplary axial alignment of the several components of the
electro-optical dithering system shown in FIG. 2;
[0070] FIGS. 5A, 5B and 5C are, respectively, schematic illustrations
similar to FIG. 2 showing the operation of the electro-optical dithering
system on light in respective operational modes;
[0071] FIG. 6 is a schematic illustration of an alternate embodiment of
electro-optical dithering system;
[0072] FIG. 7 is a schematic front view of the face or display output of a
CRT showing exemplary raster lines;
[0073] FIG. 8 is a schematic side elevation view of the electro-optical
dithering system of the invention used in an auto-stereoscopic display;
[0074] FIG. 9 is an enlarged view of a single lens element of the
auto-stereoscopic display of FIG. 8;
[0075] FIG. 10 is a schematic plan view of part of a liquid crystal
display showing areas where pixels are located and areas where there is
circuitry or dead space located between adjacent pixels and including the
electro-optical dithering system of the invention;
[0076] FIG. 11 is a schematic top view of the display of FIG. 10 showing
the paths of optical signals that are shifted in location according to
the on or off state of the electro-optical dithering system of the
display;
[0077] FIGS. 12 and 13 are schematic block diagrams of synchronizing
circuit techniques useful in the various display systems of the
invention;
[0078] FIGS. 14 and 15A-15E are schematic illustrations of a display
system and parts thereof with a double electro-optical dithering system;
[0079] FIGS. 16A-16D are schematic illustrations of a pixel pattern that
is dithered or not in up to four different spatial pattern locations;
[0080] FIG. 17 is a composite of the pixel patterns of FIGS. 16A-16D;
[0081] FIGS. 18 and 19 are schematic illustrations of a display system
with a double electro-optical dithering system and parts thereof using
switchable liquid crystal birefringent devices;
[0082] FIG. 20 is a schematic illustration of part of a red, green and
blue pixel arrangement for a multicolor display;
[0083] FIG. 21 is a schematic illustration of a segmented display system
with selective time sequenced dithering of respective segments;
[0084] FIGS. 22A-22F are schematic illustrations of the segmented display
system of FIG. 21 showing the time sequence of operation thereof;
[0085] FIG. 23 is a schematic illustration of a passive dithering system
used in connection with a display which produces a polarized output;
[0086] FIG. 24 is a schematic illustration of the effect of dithering in
both horizontal and vertical directions;
[0087] FIG. 25 is a schematic illustration of the orientations of the
optic axes of the components of the passive dithering system of FIG. 23;
[0088] FIG. 26 is a schematic illustration of the passive dithering system
of FIG. 23 used in connection with a display which produces a
nonpolarized (sometimes referred to as unpolarized) light output;
[0089] FIG. 27 is a schematic illustration of the orientations of the
optic axes of the components of the passive dithering system of FIG. 26;
[0090] FIG. 28 is a schematic illustration of an alternate embodiment of a
passive dithering system;
[0091] FIG. 29 is a schematic illustration of the orientations of the
optic axes of the components of the passive dithering system of FIG. 28;
[0092] FIG. 30 is a schematic illustration of the passive dithering system
of FIG. 28 used in connection with a display which produces a
nonpolarized light output;
[0093] FIG. 31 is a schematic illustration of an optical display system
using an alternate embodiment of a passive dithering system using
unpolarized light input;
[0094] FIG. 32 is a schematic illustration of the orientations of the
optic axes of the components of the passive dithering system of FIG. 31;
[0095] FIG. 33 is a schematic illustration of an alternate embodiment of
optical display system using an active dithering system for diagonally
displacing a pixel image;
[0096] FIG. 34 is a schematic illustration of the locations of the
original pixel images unshifted and of the shifted pixel images using the
dithering system of FIG. 33;
[0097] FIG. 35 is a schematic illustration of an alternate embodiment of
optical display system using active and passive dithering system for
displacing pixel images;
[0098] FIG. 36 is a schematic illustration of the locations of the
original pixel images unshifted and of the shifted pixel images using the
dithering system of FIG. 35 in four respective operations;
[0099] FIG. 37 is a schematic illustration of the display output from an
optical display system of the type shown in FIG. 35, for example, showing
shifting of pixel images relative to each other to obtain
superpositioning of color pixel images and increased fill factor;
[0100] FIGS. 38 and 39 are schematic illustrations of display outputs from
an optical display system of the type shown in FIG. 35 and or in other
figures hereof, for example, showing shifting of pixel images into gaps
between pixels and in overlapping relative to each other;
[0101] FIG. 40 is a schematic illustration of the display output from an
optical display system of the type shown in FIG. 41, for example, showing
shifting of pixel images according to an exemplary prescribed pattern;
[0102] FIG. 41 is a schematic illustration of an optical display system
including the components to obtain the operation depicted in FIG. 40 for
a head mounted or boom mounted display system or other display system;
[0103] FIG. 42 is a schematic illustration of a display system in
accordance with an embodiment of the invention including a head mounted
portion;
[0104] FIG. 43 is a schematic section elevation view showing the various
operational parts of the monocular viewing device used in the display
system of FIG. 1;
[0105] FIG. 44 is a compilation of graphs representing the response of a
twisted nematic LCD display pixel when addressed at 60 Hz (Hertz);
[0106] FIG. 45 is a compilation of graphs representing the response of a
twisted nematic LCD display pixel when addressed at 120 Hz;
[0107] FIG. 46 is a compilation of graphs representing the response of a
surface mode type birefringent liquid crystal light shutter operating as
an optical rotator or switch coordinated with the operation of a twisted
nematic LCD display pixel which is addressed at 120 Hz;
[0108] FIG. 47 is a schematic illustration of a display optical system
used in the viewing device of FIGS. 42-43, for example, and/or in other
viewing devices or display systems disclosed herein;
[0109] FIG. 48 is a compilation of graphs showing the relationship of
timing signals for an optical line doubler system that provides both
horizontal and vertical doubling (e.g., quadrupling of respective
pixels), for example, as in the embodiment depicted in FIGS. 14-17;
[0110] FIG. 49 is a schematic illustration of a light transmissive display
system according to an embodiment of the invention;
[0111] FIG. 50 is a schematic illustration of a light reflective display
system according to an embodiment of the invention;
[0112] FIG. 51 is a schematic view of a reflective field sequential
display and illumination system using plural cholesteric liquid crystal
reflectors and plural light sources of respective colors to provide a
multicolor or full color display useful in various embodiments of the
invention;
[0113] FIG. 52 is a schematic view of a head mounted display system
including a pair of display subsystems in accordance with various
embodiments of the invention; and
[0114] FIGS. 53-58 are schematic graphical illustrations depicting
operation of the invention.
DESCRIPTION
[0115] Referring, now in detail to the drawings wherein like reference
numerals designate like parts in the several figures and initially to
FIG. 1, an electro-optical dithering system in accordance with an
embodiment of the present invention is generally indicated at 1 in use
with a display 2 to form an optical display system 3 for providing
optical signals, visual information, etc., as the output therefrom. The
display 2 provides a source of light or optical signals, and such light
is transmitted through the electro-optical dithering system to provide
optical signals at respective locations for viewing or the like.
Exemplary light is represented by an arrow 4, such as an optical signal
produced at a particular location by the display 2 or produced by some
other source and modulated by the display 2 as the output therefrom.
[0116] The location of the output optical signal 5 is represented by
arrows 5a, 5b. Those arrows 5a, 5b represent the location of the output
optical signal 5 resulting from the optical signal 4 being transmitted
through the electro-optical dithering system 1 while the electro-optical
dithering system is in a respective one or the other of the operative
states thereof, such as off or on.
[0117] In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1 the display 2 is a CRT. It
will be appreciated that the display 2 may be an LCD or another display,
such as an electroluminescent display, plasma display, flat panel display
or other display.
[0118] Dithering may refer to the physical displacement of an image. An
electro-optical dithering system (EDS) refers to an electro-optical means
to physically shift, translate or to change the location of an optical
signal, such as an image. The image may be shifted along an axis from one
location to another and then back to the first, e.g. up and then down,
left and then right, etc. The optical signal may be moved in another
direction along a straight or other axis or not along an axis at all. The
dithering may be repetitive or periodic or it may be asynchronous in
moving an image from one location to another and then holding it there,
at least for a set or non-predetermined time.
[0119] The electro-optical dithering system 1, as it is shown in FIG. 1,
includes birefringent material, which sometimes is referred to as double
refracting material, 10. An example of birefringent material is a calcite
crystal material. Other double refracting (birefringent) materials also
may be used. Birefringent material may transmit light straight through or
may refract the light which is incident thereon, depending on a
characteristic of the light incident thereon, such as optical
polarization characteristic. In the illustrated embodiment the optical
polarization characteristic is the direction of the electric vector of
plane polarized light. Plane polarized light having one direction of
electric vector (sometimes referred to as direction of the polarization
axis, the transmission axis of the polarizer or of the light, the plane
of polarization of the light, the direction of polarization, etc.) may
transmit directly through the birefringent material 10 without being
refracted or bent, whereas light having a different direction of plane of
polarization may be refracted (bent) by the birefringent material 10. For
example, plane polarized light which encounters one index of refraction
characteristic, such as an ordinary index of refraction characteristic,
of the birefringent material may be transmitted without refraction.
However, plane polarized light which encounters a different index of
refraction characteristic, such as the extraordinary index of refraction,
of the birefringent material will bend or refract at the interface with
the birefringent material, both upon entering and upon leaving the
birefringent material. Therefore, in a sense the birefringent material 10
changes the direction of light transmitted through it, for example, as it
changes the location of the output optical signal from location 5a to 5b.
[0120] In the optical display system 3 embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1
the electro-optical dithering system 1 also includes a switch 11 that can
be operated to change the characteristic of light relevant to the
birefringent material 10 to change the location of the output optical
signal. In the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 1 refraction of light or
transmission of light without refraction by the birefringent material 10
depends on the direction of polarization of plane polarized light
incident on the birefringent material 10, and the switch 11 is able to
switch the direction of polarization of such light incident on the
birefringent material 10.
[0121] In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1 the switch 11 is a liquid
crystal cell or liquid crystal shutter type device which is able to
transmit light to the birefringent material 10 such that the light
incident on the birefringent material has a plane of polarization that
can be changed by the switch. Accordingly, if the switch is in one
operative state or mode, the light incident on the birefringent material
10 may have a plane of polarization such that the output optical signal 5
occurs at the location of the arrow 5a, and with the switch 11 in a
different state of energization the plane of polarization of the light
incident on the birefringent material 10 can be changed (e.g., switched
to an orthogonal direction to the first-mentioned plane) thereby to cause
the output optical signal to occur at the location of the arrow 5b.
[0122] A linear polarizer (sometimes referred to as a plane polarizer) 12
is between the switch 11 and the CRT display 2. The light 4 provided by
the display 2 is plane polarized by the polarizer 12. The direction of
polarization in cooperation with one condition of the switch 11 will
result in the light being transmitted directly through the birefringent
material 10 without refraction so as to appear at location of arrow 5a.
However, in response to the other condition of the switch 11, the light
will be refracted by the birefringent material 10 so as to occur at the
location of the arrow 5b.
[0123] With the foregoing in mind, then, it will be appreciated that the
invention includes a material that can move the location of an output
optical signal relative to the location of an incident (input) optical
signal depending on a characteristic of the incident optical signal, such
as the direction of plane polarized light. The electro-optical dithering
system 1 of the invention includes birefringent, double refracting, or
equivalent material and a means to switch or to discriminate the
characteristic of the incident optical signal.
[0124] In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1, the light 4 from a CRT is
unpolarized. The polarizer 12 gives the light a characteristic of linear
(plane) polarization. The switch 11 can change the direction of
polarization, e.g., the direction of the electric vector of the polarized
light. The birefringent material provides the output optical signal at
the location 5a, 5b, depending on the characteristic of the light
incident on the birefringent material.
[0125] The switch 11 may be a liquid crystal cell or several liquid
crystal cells, such as twisted nematic liquid crystal cells, birefringent
liquid crystal cells, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos.
4,385,806, RE. 32,521, and 4,540,243, the entire disclosures of which
hereby are incorporated by reference. If desired, the liquid crystal
cells may be arranged in optical series and operated as a push-pull
arrangement to improve linearity of response, and/or for other purposes,
for example, as is disclosed in one or more of the aforementioned
patents. Other types of liquid crystal cells also may be used for the
switch 11. Further, other types of devices that are able to switch the
optical characteristic of light, such as the direction of plane
polarization, etc., may be used for the switch 11; several examples
include ferro-electric liquid crystal cells, variable optical retarders,
PLZT devices, and so on.
[0126] An advantage to using a liquid crystal display (LCD) as the display
2 with the dithering system 1 is that the output light from an LCD
usually already may have a characteristic of optical polarization, such
as linear polarization. In such a case, the linear polarization
characteristic provided by such displays may eliminate the need for a
separate linear polarizer 12.
[0127] In FIG. 2 the electro-optical dithering system 1 is shown in use in
an optical display system 13 having a transmissive LCD 20. The LCD 20 may
be a twisted nematic liquid crystal display, birefringent liquid crystal
display, or some other type of liquid crystal display which produces in
response to input light 21 from a light source 22, output light
represented by an arrow 23. The LCD 20 may be transmissive or reflective.
The output light 23 may be, for example, a graphic image, one or more
light beams that are selectively turned on or off depending on operation
of the liquid crystal display 20, etc. The graphic image may be a moving
image, an alphanumeric display, etc. The dithering system 1 includes a
birefringent material 10 and a switch 11. To simplify the following
description, the switch 11 may be referred to as a polarization rotator,
which rotates the plane of polarization of the light represented by arrow
23 an amount depending upon the energization state or condition of the
polarization rotator. For example, if the switch 11 were a twisted
nematic liquid crystal cell, when it is de-energized, it would rotate the
plane of polarization by 90 degrees (or some other amount depending on
the nature of the liquid crystal cell), and when the twisted nematic
liquid crystal cell is in a fully energized condition, it would not
rotate the plane of polarization of the light incident thereon. Similar
operation could be obtained by using birefringent liquid crystal cells.
Additionally, if desired, compensation may be provided for residual
retardation in a liquid crystal cell, whether of the birefringent or
twisted nematic type; such compensation may be provided by a wave plate
or the like, such as a quarter wave plate positioned in a particular
orientation relative to the rub direction or axis of the liquid crystal
cell used in the switch 11.
[0128] Further, a wave plate, such as a half wave plate, may be used to
rotate the plane of polarization of light 23 so it is appropriately
aligned with the optic axis (sometimes referred to herein as the rub
direction, optical axis, or simply axis) of the switch 11. For example,
if the switch 11 were a twisted nematic liquid crystal cell, the plane of
polarization of the light 23 may be parallel or perpendicular to the rub
direction of one of the plates of the liquid crystal cell. If the switch
11 were a birefringent liquid crystal cell, such as a surface mode cell
or a pi-cell (e.g., as the above-mentioned patents or in U.S. Pat. No.
4,582,396, which is hereby incorporated by reference), the plane of
polarization of light 23 may be at 45 degrees to the rub direction. In
using a half wave plate to adjust plane of polarization, for example, the
axis of the half wave plate would be aligned to one half the angular
distance between the orientation of the plane of polarization of the
light incident on the half wave plate and the angular orientation desired
for the light output from the half wave plate.
[0129] Turning to FIG. 3, there is shown an example of birefringent
material 10 in the form of the mineral calcite, also referred to as a
calcite crystal 30. Unpolarized light 31 enters the calcite 30 at the
left hand face 32 thereof. The light enters at a right angle to the face
32. The light 31 is resolved into two orthogonally polarized components
33, 34 in view of the birefringent nature of the calcite. The optical
axis of the light components 33, 34 are oriented such that one component
33 has a plane of polarization or electric vector direction into and out
of the plane of the drawing of FIG. 3, as is represented by the dots
shown in FIG. 3, and such light 33 experiences an index of refraction
change between the environment 35 outside the calcite 30 and the
environment 36 inside the calcite 30. However, the axis of the calcite
crystal 30 is at a right angle to the plane of polarization to the light
33, and, therefore, this components of light 33 travels through the
calcite crystal 30 without deflection (refraction); sometimes this light
is referred to herein as the undithered light.
[0130] The light component 34 is polarized vertically in the plane of the
drawing of FIG. 3 and is represented by a double-headed arrow in the
drawing. The light component 34 experiences a change in index of
refraction as above; however, the light component 34 also encounters the
calcite crystal axis at an angle which is other than a right angle.
Therefore, the light component 34 is refracted and its path is deflected
(direction is changed) as it enters and leaves the crystal on its travel
through the crystal 30, as is shown in FIG. 3; sometimes this light is
referred to herein as the dithered light. This property of refraction of
one polarization component and no refraction of the other polarization
component of light incident on a birefringent material sometimes is
called double refraction, and it occurs in many materials. The amount of
physical displacement between the light components 33, 34 where they exit
the right hand face 37 of the calcite crystal 30 and become,
respectively, output light 33a, 34a represented by arrows at locations
38a, 38b, respectively, depends on the thickness of the calcite crystal,
indices of refraction of the calcite crystal and the external environment
thereof, and the orientation of the optical axis of the specific
material, as is known.
[0131] In the optical display system 3 of FIG. 1 in which the display 2 is
a CRT and in the optical display system 13 of FIG. 2 which uses an LCD 20
the direction of polarization of light incident on the switch 11 and the
orientation of the switch 11 may be related for optimal operation. In one
example of the invention, the switch 11 is a birefringent liquid crystal
cell (or a pair of them operating in push-pull manner), and such liquid
crystal cell(s) has (have) an axis which sometimes is referred to as the
rub direction, alignment direction, optic or optical axis, etc. of the
liquid crystal cell. Using such a liquid crystal cell in the systems 3 or
13, for optimal operation the polarization direction (transmission
direction axis of the polarizer 12 or of the LCD 20, for example) should
be at 45 degrees relative to the axis of the switch 11. Additionally,
preferably the projection of the axis of the calcite crystal 30 is
oriented at 45 degrees to the axis of the switch 11. These relationships
are depicted in FIGS. 4A, 4B and 4C.
[0132] Briefly referring to FIGS. 4A, 4B and 4C, the above-described
relationships of axes is shown. In FIG. 4A the transmission axis of the
polarizer 12 or the plane of polarization of light delivered by the
liquid crystal display 20 or by CRT 2 and polarizer 12 is shown as
horizontal at 40. However, such direction also may be vertical, because
it is desired that the relationship between that axis and the axis of the
liquid crystal cell(s) of the birefringent liquid crystal cell switch 11
be at a relative 45 degrees thereto. Such 45 degrees relationship is
shown by the respective axes 41, 42 for the switch 11. In fact, such axes
41, 42 may represent the axis of one liquid crystal cell and the axis of
a second liquid crystal cell, the two being arranged in optical series
and being operated in push-pull fashion. The axes 43, 44 of the calcite
crystal 30 are shown as horizontal and vertical. However, the vertical
axis actually is tipped in or out of the plane of the drawing and it
actually is the projection of that axes which would appear as vertical;
alternatively or additionally the horizontal axis may be tipped. Such
projection of the axes preferably is at 45 degrees to the axes 41, 42 of
the switch 11. The described relative orientation of the axes of the
various components used in connection with the invention is exemplary,
and it will be appreciated that other arrangements may be used to obtain
a particular type of operation. However, in the ideal simplified case
described herein, the relationship described may be employed. Also, it
will be appreciated that compensation may be provided to adjust the
effective orientation of a particular axis. Such compensation can be
provided using a birefringent material, a wave plate, such as a quarter
wave plate or another one, etc., as was mentioned above.
[0133] It will be appreciated that whether the axis of a birefringent
switch 11 is at plus or minus 45 degrees, represented by the axis lines
41, 42, for example, and whether a respective axis 43, 44 of the calcite
30 or other double refracting material 10 is at plus or minus 45 degrees
to the axis of the birefringent switch (and parallel or perpendicular to
the plane of polarization 40) will determine whether the dithered optical
signal will be moved up, down, left or right relative to the undithered
signal. If the switch 11 were a twisted nematic liquid crystal cell, the
axis 40 may be parallel or perpendicular to one of the axes of the liquid
crystal cell, and the orientation of the calcite 30 may be as shown in
FIG. 4C relative to the plane of polarization of the light represented at
40 in FIG. 4A.
[0134] It will be appreciated that the arrangement of axes herein
described are exemplary. The alignment of the switch 11, whatever that
component is comprised of, preferably is such that the switch is able to
change a characteristic of light in the display system 3, 13 (and others
described herein, for example) so that selective dithering can be carried
out by a double refraction or other functionally equivalent material or
device. Orientation of the double refracting material may be such as to
cause such selective dithering depending on an optical characteristic of
the light, which is incident thereon and/or is transmitted therethrough,
relative to the double refracting material.
[0135] Quarter wave plates, other wave plates, etc. may be used in
conjunction with coupling of light along optical paths used in the
electro-optical dithering system 1 and/or the optical display systems 3
or 13, etc. Also, such wave plates may be used to convert plane polarized
light to circularly polarize light or vice versa, depending on the nature
of the optical coupling occurring in the various components and optical
paths and/or the switch 11 used in the invention.
[0136] Referring to FIGS. 5A, 5B and 5C, operation of the EDS 1 according
to the invention is depicted for use in the exemplary systems 3, 13,
etc., which are expressly described herein, and in other display systems,
too. Light 4, for example, from a CRT, is horizontally polarized by the
polarizer 12. Arrow 50 represents such horizontal polarization, as does
the dot in that arrow 50. The switch 11 is a birefringent liquid crystal
cell of the type disclosed in the above-mentioned patents (such types
sometimes being referred to as "surface mode" or "pi-cell" liquid crystal
devices). When the switch 11 is in the high voltage state it does not
affect the state of polarization of the light 50. Therefore, light 51
exiting the switch 11 also has horizontal polarization, e.g., into and
out of the plane of the paper of the drawing. The light 51 enters the
double refracting material (birefringent material) 10 and is transmitted
without any deflection and is provided as output light 52 at the location
and in the direction of arrow 5a.
[0137] Referring to FIG. 5B, when the switch 11 is in the low voltage
state, it rotates the plane of polarization of the light 50 preferably 90
degrees, i.e., into the vertical plane, as is shown by the vertical arrow
53 associated with the light 51. The vertically polarized light enters
the double refracting material 10 and its path is physically displaced,
as is represented by dashed line 54 resulting in output light 52 at the
location and in the direction of the arrow 5b.
[0138] Briefly referring to FIG. 5C, the electro-optical dithering system
1 is shown having the light output 52 selectively switched between the
location of the arrows 5a when the switch 11 is in the high voltage (no
rotation of plane of polarization) state and the location of the arrow
5b, which occurs when the switch 11 is in the low voltage (polarization
rotating) state. The light represented by arrow 5a is horizontally
polarized, and the light represented by the arrow 5b is vertically
polarized, as is represented in the drawing of FIG. 5C. By selectively
energizing and de-energizing or, in any event, operating the switch 11
between two mentioned voltage states, which switch the polarization
characteristic of the light, the location of the output optical signal 52
can be switched between the locations represented by arrows 5a and 5b.
[0139] A modified optical display system 60 is shown in FIG. 6 using an
electro-optical dithering system 1, as was described above, in
combination with an output polarizer (analyzer) 12'. The analyzer 12' may
be a linear (plane) polarizer or some other device which can discriminate
between the characteristics of light incident therein, such as the
direction of plane of polarization, circular polarization, etc. The parts
of the electro-optical dithering system 1 include a birefringent material
10, such as a calcite material described above, and a switch 11, such as
one of the liquid crystal cell devices described above, or some other
device, as will be appreciated.
[0140] The incident light 4 is received from a light source or image
source, such as a CRT 2 or some other device that delivers unpolarized
light output. Such unpolarized light 4 incident on the birefringent
material 10 is divided into two components 61, 62. The light component 61
is horizontally polarized and it is transmitted directly through the
birefringent material 10 without deflection or refraction. The light
component 62 is polarized in the vertical direction, and it is refracted
so that its direction is changed (path is deflected) in the manner shown
representatively in FIG. 6.
[0141] It will be appreciated that here and elsewhere in this description
reference to directions is meant to be relative and exemplary; for
example, horizontal and vertical are meant to indicate orthogonal
relationship. Directions are exemplary and are used to facilitate
description and understanding of the invention.
[0142] The horizontally polarized light component 61 and the vertically
polarized light component 62, the directions of polarization being
represented by the dots 63 and the arrow 64, respectively, are incident
on the switch 11. From the switch 11 the light components 61, 62 are
incident on the analyzer 12'. That light component which has a
polarization direction that is parallel to the transmission axis of the
analyzer 12' will be transmitted through the analyzer, and the other
light component will be blocked. Depending on whether the switch 11 is in
the operative state to transmit light without rotation of the plane of
polarization or is in the operative mode to rotate the plane of
polarization of the light transmitted therethrough, one or the other of
the light components 61, 62 will be transmitted through the analyzer 12'
at a respective location represented by one of the arrows 5a, 5b.
[0143] An exemplary use of the invention is illustrated in FIG. 7 for the
CRT display 2 or for a liquid crystal display 20, for example. The
display 2, 20 has a resolution of some fixed number of raster lines or
rows of pixels that are updated periodically, for example, 60 times per
second.
[0144] Assume that the speed of the display is increased, for example, is
doubled to 120 times per second to re-scan the raster lines and/or the
rows of pixels. The switch 11 can be synchronized with the switching of
the display (CRT 2 or liquid crystal display 20) such that the raster
images, for example, are alternately displaced and not displaced, e.g.,
to locations 5a and 5b, respectively. Such synchronization may be with
respect to the blanking pulse or some other signal.
[0145] The amount of such shifting or displacement can be adjusted as
aforesaid so that the displaced raster lines (or pixel rows)
interdigitate the non-displaced raster lines (pixel rows). The
information on the displaced and non-displaced rasters (pixel rows) are
selected to carry complementary information; and, therefore, the
resolution of the entire image displayed by the optical display system 3
or 13 is increased by a factor of 2. The same technique can be used to
provide image coverage over the dead space between adjacent pixels in a
liquid crystal display (or in a CRT, e.g., where a shadow mask blocks
transmission of electrons) or to cover areas where conductors or other
electrical connections or components of a liquid crystal display, such as
parts of an active matrix array, are located, usually between adjacent
pixels.
[0146] The display ordinarily would be refreshed or updated 60 times per
second to cover both the odd and even raster lines. However, by
increasing the refresh or update rate to 120 times per second and using
the electro-optical dithering system to shift the location of the output
image or optical signal for part of the time, essentially the odd and
even raster lines, while unshifted, can be refreshed or updated 60 times
per second and the odd and even raster lines, while shifted, can be
refreshed or updated 60 times per second. The update or refresh times or
rates presented here are exemplary; others may be used.
[0147] In FIG. 7, assuming the display 2 is a CRT, the front face 70 has a
plurality of odd raster lines and a plurality of even raster lines.
During operation of the CRT display 2, initially the odd raster lines are
scanned to produce a first subframe (field). Subsequently, the even
raster lines are scanned, and a second subframe (field) is produced. The
information produced during the respective first and second subframes is
referred to as complementary and together complete an image (sometimes
referred to as a frame or picture) that is viewed. The time between
producing one subframe and the next is sufficiently fast that the eye of
an observer (viewer) integrates the respective first and second subframe
images to see one complete (composite) image. Similarly, using the
principles of the present invention, the space between adjacent raster
lines can in effect be scanned to produce additional complementary image
information. Thus, for example, the odd lines can be scanned during the
first subframe; the even lines can be scanned during the second subframe;
the odd lines can be scanned during a third subframe but during which the
switch 11 of the electro-optical dithering system 1 is operative to cause
shifting of the image to the space between respective adjacent pairs of
odd and even raster lines; and finally during a fourth subframe analogous
to the third, the even raster lines can be scanned while the
electro-optical dithering system provides a shift of optical output, to
produce the shifted image between respective pairs of odd and even raster
lines. In this way resolution of the output image produced by the optical
display system 3 is increased without having to increase the resolution
or space between relatively adjacent raster lines (scan lines) of the CRT
display 2 and a similar technique can be used to increase the effective
number of the pixels, pixel rows, etc. to increase resolution of the
liquid crystal display 20.
[0148] Turning to FIGS. 8 and 9, an auto-stereoscopic display system 80 is
shown using the electro-optical dithering system 1 of the invention. The
principles of auto-stereoscopic display are well known and will not be
described in detail here. However, the technique of obtaining the
auto-stereoscopic display effect will be described.
[0149] In the auto-stereoscopic display 80, there is a CRT display 2,
which provides a light output 4, which is delivered to a linear polarizer
12. The plane polarized light from the linear polarizer 12 is provided to
the electro-optical dithering system 1, which includes a surface mode
device (surface mode liquid crystal cell) switch 11 and double refracting
material (birefringent material) 10. At the output of the electro-optical
dithering system 11 is a cylindrical lens array 81. The cylindrical lens
array includes a plurality of cylindrical lenses located in an
appropriate arrangement or pattern, as is known, to direct light to or
toward respective eyes 82, 83 of a person, or to some other device able
to detect or "see" the light received thereby. By providing a left eye
image to the left eye 82 and a right eye image to the right eye 83, an
individual viewing the auto-stereoscopic display system 80 will discern a
three dimensional or stereoscopic effect.
[0150] Using the electro-optical dithering system 1 of the invention in
combination with a display source, such as a CRT display 2, a liquid
crystal display 20, or some other display, light beam steering can be
accomplished to obtain the left eye and right eye images. Therefore,
auto-stereoscopic display systems can be provided easily and relatively
inexpensively.
[0151] In FIG. 9 the technique for obtaining beam steering for
auto-stereoscopic effect is illustrated. Incident light 4, which is
unpolarized, as is represented by the arrows and dots on the light is
incident on the plane polarizer 12. Alternatively, plane polarized light
can be provided from an image source or light source, such as a liquid
crystal display (and polarizer 12 may be eliminated). In any event, the
light which exits the polarizer 12 is plane polarized, for example, in a
horizontal plane, as is illustrated in FIG. 9. Such light then enters the
switch 11 and from there the light enters and transmits through the
double refracting material 10. Depending on whether the switch 11 rotates
the plane of polarization or it does not rotate the plane of polarization
of the light transmitted therethrough, the double refracting material 10
will deflect or will not deflect the light transmitted therethrough. In
the case that the switch 11 does not rotate the plane of polarization,
and the above-described alignment of the double refracting material 10 is
provided, the light will transmit directly through the material 10
without deflection as light ray 90. When light ray 90 is transmitted
through the interface 91 between the cylindrical lens 92 of the
cylindrical lens array 81 and the external environment, such as air,
represented at 93, the light 90 will refract in the direction of the
arrow 94 toward the left eye 82 of the observer (viewer). The light 90
traveling in the direction of the arrow 94 remains polarized in the
so-called horizontal direction, i.e., into and out of the plane of the
paper of the drawing.
[0152] However, when the switch 11 rotates the plane of polarization of
light transmitted therethrough, the double refracting material 10
deflects the light, as was described above, resulting in the light 95,
which travels to a different location of the interface 91 of the lens 92.
The light 95 refracts at the interface 91 and is bent or deflected in the
direction of the arrow 96 toward the right eye 83 of the observer. The
light 95 is vertically polarized, i.e., the plane of polarization is
parallel with the plane of the paper of the drawing of FIG. 9.
[0153] In operation of the auto-stereoscopic display 80, left eye and
right eye images sequentially are produced by the display 2 (20) for
example. When the left eye image is displayed, the switch 11 does not
rotate the plane of polarization, and the light 90 follows the direction
of the arrow 94 to the left eye 82 of the observer. When the right eye
image is produced by the display, the switch 11 does rotate the plane of
polarization so that the material 10 deflects the light as light 95 which
is refracted to the direction of the arrow 96 to the right eye 83 of the
observer. For convenience of this description, it is understood that the
indices of refraction of the material 10 and the material of which the
lens 92 is made would be the same or about the same to avoid further
refraction at the interface therebetween; however, if there is refraction
there, such refraction can be taken into account, as will be appreciated
by those having ordinary skill in the art.
[0154] Referring to FIGS. 10 and 11, a display system 99, which includes a
liquid crystal display 100, is shown in top plan and top section views.
The display system 99 is similar to the several other display systems
described herein, such as those designated 3, 13, etc. The LCD 100 has a
plurality of pixels 101 arranged in respective rows 102 with dead space
103 between respective rows and also at the edge 104 of the display 100.
As is seen in FIG. 11, the liquid crystal display 100 includes a
substrate 105 on which an active matrix array 106 is located. The liquid
crystal display also includes a further substrate 107, a space 108
between substrates where liquid crystal material 109 is located, a seal
110 to close the space between the substrates, and (not shown)
appropriate driving circuitry, as is well known. Light 120 represented by
respective arrows illustrated in FIG. 11 is provided by a light source
121 and is selectively transmitted or not through the liquid crystal
display. The light 120 is plane polarized by a plane polarizer 122
located between the light source 121 and the liquid crystal display 100,
and the light 120 is transmitted or is not transmitted as a function of
the plane of polarization thereof relative to an analyzer 123, as is well
known. An electrode 124 on the substrate 107 and respective transistors
and electrodes of the active matrix array 106 on the substrate 105 apply
or do not apply electric field to liquid crystal material 109 at
respective pixels 101 to determine whether or not the plane of
polarization of light 120 is rotated and, thus, whether such light will
be transmitted or will not be transmitted through the analyzer 123.
[0155] The light 120 which is transmitted through the analyzer 123 is
incident on the electro-optical dithering system (EDS) 1. The
electro-optical dithering system may be operated to not shift or to shift
the location of the light 120 to locations 5a, 5b in the manner described
above. If the optical signal at locations 5a, 5b is complementary, as was
described above, the resolution of the optical display system 99 shown in
FIG. 11 can be increased. Moreover, as part of such increased resolution,
the dead space 103 where transistors 131 and/or other components that are
not light transmissive in the active matrix array 106 effectively are
covered over by the shifted light 5b, for example. Therefore, using the
electro-optical dithering system 1 in a display system 99 as described,
the light blocking portions of the active matrix array, of conductors,
etc., can be in effect overcome or negated while the overall resolution
of the display is improved.
[0156] The parts shown in FIGS. 10 and 11 are in a relatively horizontal
relation showing dithering in a vertical direction. It will be
appreciated that dithering can alternatively be in a horizontal direction
or, if desired, multiple electro-optical dithering systems 1 can be used
in optical series in order to obtain both vertical dithering and
horizontal dithering.
[0157] The LCD 100 preferably is relatively fast acting to turn on and
off. Therefore, using the combination of the fast acting LCD with the EDS
1 the respective lines of one subframe of information can be displayed by
the respective rows of pixels of the LCD and subsequently the interlaced
lines of the next subframe can be displayed by the same respective rows
of pixels of the LCD.
[0158] The light source for the LCD 100 may be a pulsed source, which
produces light output in pulses or sequential bursts. In such case, it is
desirable to synchronize the light pulses or bursts of the light source
with the LCD and/or with the EDS 1. Therefore, the respective pixels of
the LCD would transmit or block light when the light source is producing
a desired light output. The amount of time that the light source is
transitioning between a light transmitting or light blocking state may be
reduced and preferably is minimized. Also, the LCD would be operative to
transmit or to block light when the light source is producing its
intended light output rather than when the light source is not producing
a burst of light or a desired light output. This tends to increase the
contrast of the output image, since the shutter element (LCD 100) is not
changing state when the light is pulsed, e.g. is changing its state from
light producing to not producing or vice versa.
[0159] The EDS 1 and the LCD 100 preferably are synchronized. Therefore,
when the LCD is producing scan lines of information from one subframe the
EDS is in one state, and when the LCD is producing scan lines of
information from the other subframe, the EDS is in its other state
thereby causing the lines of one subframe to be interlaced with the lines
of the other subframe. The EDS and a pulsating type light source also may
be synchronized so that the EDS switches states during the time that no
light output or non-optimal light output is produced by the light source.
This further enhances contrast of the display system 3, 13, 99.
[0160] Various circuitry may be used to obtain the aforementioned
synchronization. Two examples are shown, respectively, in FIGS. 12 and
13. In FIG. 12 an exemplary display system 140 is shown. In the display
system 140 a blanking pulse from a source 141 is supplied to respective
LCD buffer and EDS buffer circuits 142, 143 to synchronize operation of
them. The actual information signals from line 144 indicating the light
transmitting or blocking state, for example, of the pixels of the LCD
100, for example, as is shown in FIGS. 10 and 11, are provided the LCD
buffer 142. Those information signals are not delivered to the LCD 100,
though, until appropriately coordinated or synchronized with the blanking
pulses. The EDS 1 is connected to the EDS buffer 143 and receives its
drive signal from line 145 to dither or not the optical output from the
LCD 100. The EDS buffer also receives the blanking pulse from the source
141 to synchronize delivery of the signals to the EDS with such blanking
pulses and/or with the operation of the LCD buffer and information
signals delivered to the LCD. The buffers 142, 143 can be synchronized
with respect to each other by appropriate timed operation thereof with
respect to the blanking pulse; or, alternatively, the buffers can be
directly coupled to each other to synchronize operation thereof so that
the dithering function is coordinated with switching of pixels or writing
of information to the LCD.
[0161] As another example of synchronization, FIG. 13 depicts a display
system 150 in which a pulsed light source 121, for example, receives
pulsed power from a power supply 151. A signal representing the
characteristics of the pulsed power from the powers supply 151 is
provided to the LCD buffer 142 and EDS buffer 143, which respectively
receive information and power signals on lines 144, 145 as described
above. By synchronizing the LCD 100 and EDS 1 with respect to each other
and/or with respect to the pulsing light source, the LCD can switch
states as new information is written thereto when the light source is not
producing significant light output, and/or the EDS can switch from direct
transmission to dithered transmission of light states when the light
source is not producing a bright output and/or the LCD is not in the
process of switching display states.
[0162] The foregoing are but two examples of synchronization useful in the
various display systems and embodiments of the invention. It will be
appreciated by those having ordinary skill in the art that many other
types of synchronizing techniques may be used to obtain the desired
synchronization.
[0163] Although it may be desired to obtain full interlacing and
separation of respective lines as in a CRT display, for example, even
less than full interlacing, e.g., an amount of displacement that does not
fully separate the lines but nevertheless reduces the amount of overlap
thereof, will tend to reduce the above-mentioned jitter and improve the
optical output of the LCD.
[0164] Interlacing or dithering can be used to effect vertical
displacement (changing of location of the optical output signal),
horizontal (lateral) displacement, and/or diagonal displacement of the
optical signal, such as that produced as the output from a pixel of a
display, e.g., a CRT, LCD, or any other type of display. The direction of
displacement will depend on the orientation of the various components of
the optical system. For example, in the EDS of FIG. 1 having orientation
of axes of components shown in FIGS. 4A, 4B and 4C, vertical displacement
will occur. However, by changing the relative orientation of the axes by
45 degrees or 90 degrees, the displacement as a function of the state of
the switch 11, for example, can be changed to diagonal or horizontal.
[0165] Using the vertical displacement of optical signals by the EDS 1 in
combination with a display, such as an LCD, for example, it possible in
effect to double the resolution of the display in the manner described
above. Thus, in a sense, the EDS becomes an optical line doubler which
doubles the number of horizontal lines of resolution of the display
system. However, by using both vertical and horizontal displacement
functions in a display system, it is possible to obtain in effect up to
quadruple the resolution of the display relative to operation of the
display absent the EDS.
[0166] Referring to FIGS. 14 and 15A-15E an EDS system 201 used with a
display 202, in the illustrated embodiment an LCD (although other types
of displays can be used), is shown as a display system 203. In FIGS. 14
and 15A-15E reference numerals which designate parts that are the same or
similar to those described above are the same as the reference numerals
that designate such above-described parts except being increased by the
value 200. Thus, display system 203 is similar to display systems 3, 13,
99, etc. mentioned herein.
[0167] However, the EDS system 201 of display system 203 includes two EDS
portions 201v and 201h, which respectively can be operated to obtain
vertical and horizontal displacement of the optical signal transmitted
therethrough. Each EDS 201v, 201h includes, respectively, a double
refracting material 210v, 210h and a switch 211v, 211h. For example, each
double refracting material may be a calcite crystal and each switch may
be a surface mode (birefringent) liquid crystal cell. The source of
optical signals in display system 203 is a flat panel liquid crystal
display 202, although other types of displays may be used. The LCD 202
provides light output that is plane polarized, and, therefore, a separate
polarizer like the polarizer 12 of FIG. 1, for example, may be
unnecessary in the illustrated embodiment of display system 203. It will
be appreciated that although the display system 203 uses two EDS devices
or portions, the principles of the invention may be used with more than
two EDS portions to obtain not only horizontal and vertical displacement
but also displacement in even another direction.
[0168] The relative orientation of the axes of the respective components
of the display system 203 is shown in FIGS. 15A-15E. Plane (linear)
polarized light having a horizontal plane of polarization is provided by
the LCD 202, as is seen in FIG. 15A. In the vertical displacement EDS
201v, the axis of the birefringent liquid crystal switch 211v shown in
FIG. 15B is oriented at 45 degrees to the plane of polarization of light
from the source 203; in the illustrated embodiment, such orientation is
actually -45 degrees relative to vertical, for example. The projection of
the axis of the double refracting material 210v is vertical, as is seen
in FIG. 15C. In the horizontal displacement EDS 201h, the axis of the
birefringent liquid crystal switch 211v is oriented at +45 degrees to the
vertical (FIG. 15D), and the projection of the axis of the double
refracting material 210h is horizontal (FIG. 15E). The actual alignments
may be slightly different from those illustrated to accommodate or to
compensate for residual birefringence in the liquid crystal switches
and/or for other purposes. Also, if desired wave plates and/or other
optical components may be included with one or more of the EDS devices
201h, 201v to compensate for such residual retardation and/or other
factors.
[0169] The display system 203 can be operated in four different states. In
one state shown in FIG. 16A with both EDS devices 201v, 201h of FIG. 14
not displacing light, the light from the display source 202 is
transmitted without being displaced; this may occur with birefringent
switches 211v, 211h being in high voltage, non-polarization rotating
state and low, polarization rotating states, respectively. In a second
state shown in FIG. 16B with EDS device 201v, 201h respectively not
displacing and displacing light, the light from the display source 202 is
transmitted while being horizontally, but not vertically displaced; this
may occur with both birefringent switches 211v, 211h being in high
voltage, non-polarization rotating state. In a third state shown in FIG.
16C with both EDS devices 201v, 201h displacing light, the light from the
display source 202 is transmitted while being displaced both horizontally
and vertically; this may occur with both birefringent switches 211v, 211h
being in low voltage, polarization rotating state. In a fourth state
shown in FIG. 16D with EDS device 201v, 201h respectively displacing and
not displacing light, the light from the display source 202 is
transmitted while being vertically, but not horizontally displaced; this
may occur with EDS 211v in the low voltage, polarization rotating state
and birefringent switch 211h being in high voltage, non-polarization
rotating state.
[0170] In FIG. 17 is illustrated a composite of the display conditions
depicted in FIGS. 16A through 16D. By using relatively fast acting LCD as
the display source 202 and two EDS devices 201h, 201v synchronized and
operated in the manner just described so that the pixels first are shown
in the manner in FIG. 16A, then as in FIG. 16B, etc., sufficiently
quickly that the observer's eyes tend to integrate the respective images,
a high resolution image with a pixel density like that shown in FIG. 17
can be obtained. It will be appreciated that an exemplary optimum
improvement in resolution using the display system 203 in the described
manner can increase resolution of the display 202 by approximately a
factor of 4.
[0171] Thus, it will be appreciated that the respective switches 211v,
211h may be operated according to the following table to obtain the
above-described operation controllably to vertically shift or displace
and/or to horizontally shift or displace the optical signals from the
display 202. High means electrically operated so as to be not
polarization rotating and low means electrically operated so as to be
polarization rotating, although other conventions may be used.
TABLE-US-00001
TABLE 1
Switch 211v Switch 211h
High Low
High High
Low Low
Low High
[0172] In the present invention the switches and double refracting
material may be substantially optically transparent. Therefore, those
components do not tend to absorb light. The use of such components in a
display system 203, for example, does not ordinarily significantly reduce
the brightness of the display output. Although two or more images are
placed sequentially in the field of view provided by the display system
3, 13, 99, 203, etc., brightness of the display output is not diminished;
rather, image resolution can be increased.
[0173] Other types of birefringent materials and/or devices may be used in
place of or in addition to the calcite material double refracting device
10 described above. For example, other types of crystal materials and/or
minerals may be used; the amount of displacement between an unrefracted
optical signal and a refracted optical signal by such double refracting
material would depend on index of refraction characteristics of the
double refracting material, the index of refraction of the environment
external of the double refracting material, wavelength of optical signal,
and distance the optical signal travels in the double refracting
material.
[0174] Another double refracting material which may be used in the
invention as component 10, for example, is liquid crystal material.
Liquid crystal material, such as nematic liquid crystal and smectic
liquid crystal material may be birefringent and may be used. Other types
of birefringent liquid crystal materials also may be used. By organizing
or orienting the liquid crystal material in a particular organization or
orientation, the transmission of light therethrough with or without
refracting the light can be dependent on the direction of electric vector
of the light, e.g., the plane of polarization of plane polarized light.
[0175] A polymer liquid crystal may be especially useful as such a double
refracting material, for such material both can have a relatively large
birefringence and also can be formed into a solid material which
maintains the orientation of the structure of the liquid crystal material
thereof. Polymer liquid crystal materials are known.
[0176] However, if the double refracting material were of a liquid crystal
material whose structural orientation or organization could be switched,
e.g., in response to application of a prescribed input such as an
electric field (or removal of such field or changing voltage or some
other characteristic of the field, etc.), then the function of the two
components of an EDS may be replaced by a single switchable liquid
crystal shutter type device. In this case the liquid crystal shutter
could provide one index of refraction or birefringence characteristic to
refract light transmitted therethrough a given amount and a different
index of refraction characteristic with no birefringence so as not to
refract such light or with parameters to refract the light a different
amount.
[0177] An embodiment of display system 203' which uses a pair of
switchable liquid crystal cells 270, 271 associated with a liquid crystal
display 202' is shown in FIGS. 18 and 19. Each of the liquid crystal
cells 270, 271 functions as a combination of birefringent or double
refracting material 210h, 210v and as a switch 211h, 211v. The liquid
crystal cells may be, for example, aligned like a birefringent liquid
crystal cell using nematic or smectic liquid crystal material between a
pair of glass plates. The plates are treated so the liquid crystal is
aligned generally in the same direction at both plates without twisting;
and, therefore is so aligned throughout the cell. The liquid crystal
material preferably is tilted, e.g., at 45 degrees, to obtain a desired
birefringence characteristic; but although tilted, the projection of the
axis of the liquid crystal structure would be in the same plane as the
plane of polarization of incident light thereon to obtain the desired
birefringence characteristic. The exemplary arrangement of axes of the
display system 203' is shown in FIG. 19.
[0178] By changing the electrical drive signal to the respective liquid
crystal cells 270, 271, the index of refraction characteristics thereof
can be changed, and, as a result, the location of the optical signal
transmitted therethrough can be changed, e.g., dithered as described
herein. For example, for plane polarized light incident on liquid crystal
cell 270 which has liquid crystal therein structurally aligned such that
the light experiences the ordinary index of refraction of the liquid
crystal and no birefringence, the light will transmit directly through
the liquid crystal cell without refraction. However, if the liquid
crystal is structurally aligned such that the light experiences the
extraordinary index of refraction and, thus, birefringence, the light
will be refracted at the interface between the liquid crystal material
and the glass plate or the like forming or at one surface of the liquid
crystal cell 270 at one side; and the light will be refracted again at
the interface between the liquid crystal and the glass plate etc. at the
other surface of the liquid crystal cell so as to be parallel with the
light incident on the liquid crystal cell 270 but displaced from the
extension of the transmission axis of the incident light.
[0179] Thus, by selectively operating, e.g., energizing and deenergizing
or changing energization level, the liquid crystal cells 270, 271, then,
can change the location of the optical signal output by the display
system 203'. The liquid crystal should be aligned to present to the light
transmitted therethrough either the ordinary or extraordinary axis or
index of refraction and appropriate birefringence characteristic as
described above. If only one liquid crystal cell 270 is used, the optical
signal can be changed back and forth in one plane or direction. If two
liquid crystal cells 270, 271 (like the cell 270, for example) are used
and are arranged such that the axes thereof are non parallel, then the
optical signal can be changed back and forth in two planes or directions.
Such non-parallel alignment may be perpendicular alignment to obtain
up/down dithering and left/right dithering relationships. Since the plane
of polarization of light incident on the liquid crystal cell 271 should
be parallel to the axis of that cell, a half wave plate 272 may be placed
between the liquid crystal cells 270, 271 to rotate the plane of
polarization of the light exiting the liquid crystal cell 270. For
example, the axis of such half wave plate may be oriented at 45 degrees
relative to the plane of polarization, i.e., half way between the 90
degrees desired rotation. It is noted that a polarizer 12 is shown in
FIGS. 18 and 19; such polarizer helps assure the quality of polarization
of the light from the display; but such polarizer can be eliminated if
the output from the display is of sufficient quality of polarization,
e.g., minimal amount of unpolarized light included therein.
[0180] The EDS 1, 201 may be used in a display system 3, 13, 99, 203,
203', etc. which is monochrome or multicolor. Operation for a monochrome
display system would be, for example, as is described above. One
embodiment exemplifying operation for a multicolor, such as a red, green
and blue (rgb), display system can employ the above-described type of
operation for each color. Therefore, when one color or a group of colors
is being displayed by respective pixels of such a color display, the
optical signal output can be either transmitted without displacement or
with displacement in the manner described above. As is depicted
schematically in FIG. 20, part of a display 202', e.g., similar to
display 202, is shown including three representative adjacent pixel
triads 281, 282, 283, each including a red, green and blue pixel portion.
The display 202' may be operated in a color frame sequential mode in
which respective red, green and blue frames or images are produced in
time sequence. In this case all red pixels of respective pixel triads
281, 282, 283, etc. would be red where it is desired in the final image
to have red light; subsequently green and then blue pixels of the image
would be created. Alternatively, the respective red, green and blue
pixels of respective triads can be displaying respective colors
simultaneously. In either case, the principles of the invention using the
EDS 1, 101, etc. may be used to increase resolution of the output image
in the above-described manner.
[0181] However, the EDS may be used for the purpose of selectively
dithering (displacing) less than all of the color frames of a multicolor
display, especially if the display is operated in a color frame
sequential mode. For example, the dithering function can be used
selectively to displace or not the green optical signal (light produced
during the green frame) of the display 3, 13, 99, 203, 200'; however, the
EDS may be used so it does not selectively to dither the optical signal
during one or both of the other color frames. Since the human eye is more
sensitive to green light than to red or blue light, a significant
enhancement of the apparent resolution of the multicolor display can be
achieved by only selectively dithering the green light optical signal. If
desired, the green and red optical signals can be selectively dithered
without selectively dithering the blue optical signal; and this will
result in an even greater apparent resolution of the multicolor display
than if only the green optical signal were selectively dithered. Since
the human eye is not as sensitive to blue light as it is to red or green
light, the fact that resolution of the blue light or blue frame component
of the overall image is not enhanced by the dithering of the invention
may not significantly reduce the resolution of the composite multicolor
output image. By reducing the amount of dithering required, it is
possible that the complexity and/or cost of the electronic drive and
timing circuitry employed in the invention can be reduced.
[0182] Referring to FIGS. 21, and 22A-22F, there is shown a schematic
illustration depicting a time sequence of operation of the invention
using a segmented display system 403. FIG. 22A represents the output
operation of the display system 403 at one period of time; FIG. 22B
represents operation at the next period of time; and so on. In FIGS. 21
and 22A-22F the various parts which correspond to parts described above
are identified by the same reference numerals but increased to a 400
series. Thus, display system 3, 13, 99, 203, 203', etc. in FIGS. 21 and
22A-22F is designated 403, for example.
[0183] The face 470 of the display system 403 in FIGS. 21 and 22A-22F is
divided into three separate segments 470a, 470b, 470c. More specifically,
the display 402 may include a CRT or an LCD 2, 20, 102, etc., and between
the display and the viewer, for example, is at least one, and possibly
several in series, electro-optical dithering system 1, 11, 21, 101, as
was described in the several embodiments above. For simplicity of
description here the display system 403 is described with only one EDS,
though.
[0184] The EDS 401 includes, for example, a double refracting material 410
and a switch 411 such as a surface mode liquid crystal cell. However, the
switch 411 is segmented into several areas which can be separately
addressed to change the optical characteristics thereof. The switch 411
is shown in FIGS. 21 and 22A-22F as having three separate segments 411a,
411b, 411c; but it will be appreciated that the switch may have fewer or
more segments. Each segment 411a, 411b, 411c can be separately operated
to change or not to change the direction of plane of polarization of
light transmitted therethrough. Each segment can be a separate liquid
crystal cell or each can be part of the same liquid crystal cell which
has an electrode arrangement which permits operating of the different
parts separately.
[0185] In FIGS. 22A, 22B, 22C, respectively, (with reference also to FIG.
21) the first subframe (field) of information is written sequentially to
the upper, middle and lower thirds 402a, 402b, 402c of the display 402
for direct transmission without being dithered or shifted in position. By
the time the information is being written to the middle third of the
display 402, the information written to the top third begins fading; and
by the time the information is being written to the bottom third, the
information at the top third is substantially fully faded and that at the
middle third is beginning to fade.
[0186] In FIG. 22D the start of information representing the second
subframe (field) being written to the display 402, initially to the top
third 402a of the display, is shown. The dithered information optical
signal in the top third of FIG. 22D is represented by the illustrated
dashed lines. Since such information is for the second subframe, the
optical signal output is intended to be dithered/changed; however, at
this time the image or optical output presented by the middle third 402b
of the display 402 has not completely faded. Therefore, if the optical
output of the entire display 402 were dithered at this time, the optical
information or optical output signal still being displayed at the middle
third would be shifted to an incorrect location. To avoid this wrongful
shifting of the optical signal from the middle third at this time, only
the top third 402a of the display 402 is dithered. Preferably the top
third actually is dithered when the previous image there has faded; and
that actually can occur at the time period represented in FIG. 22C.
[0187] At the time period represented by FIG. 22D the middle third of the
display 402 has faded, and is dithered; and at the time period
represented by FIG. 22E, information is written to that dithered middle
third of the display, and the bottom third which has faded is dithered.
At the time period represented by FIG. 22F, the dithered image
information is written to the bottom third of the display 402 and the top
third is dithered since the information previously written there by now
has faded.
[0188] The above-described operation of the display system 403 can
continue sequentially as the respective subframes are sequentially
displayed, e.g., the optical signals comprising such subframes are
presented as the output of the display system. In each subframe the
different respective parts or segments are sequentially dithered or not
preferably so that a segment is already undithered or dithered before the
raster, line, row, etc. of information to form the optical signal is
written to the respective pixels of that segment. The dithering or
undithering switching action, e.g., operation of the respective switches
411a, 411b, 411c from one state to the other, also can be carried out as
the action of writing information to a segment is carried out; but
ordinarily it would be better to effect the dithering or undithering when
the segment is relatively blank (e.g., information there has faded) to
avoid undertaking a dithering or undithering action while an optical
output is being displayed.
[0189] It will be appreciated that the segmentation technique may be used
with display system which uses a CRT display, a liquid crystal display or
some other type of display. The segmented switch 411 approach also is
useful to remove artifacts caused by a relatively slow acting LCD.
[0190] Further, it will be appreciated that the various EDS embodiments of
the present invention and display systems using such EDS embodiments are
operative to move, shift, translate, etc. an output optical signal from
one location to another without substantially affecting brightness of the
display system or optical signal. The components of the EDS generally are
optically transparent, and, therefore, other than a relatively minor
amount of absorption of light transmitted therethrough, there may be
otherwise relatively little reduction in light intensity. Therefore, the
features of the invention may be used for the various purposes described
herein, for example, to increase resolution, to cover or to reduce the
effective optical dead space, etc., without reducing brightness of the
optical output.
[0191] A passive dithering system 500 in accordance with one aspect of the
present invention is illustrated schematically in FIG. 23 in an optical
display system 501. The passive dithering system 500 as shown is used in
connection with a display 502 which produces an output of polarized
light, such as might be produced by a twisted nematic (TN) based flat
panel liquid crystal display 504 incorporating a linear polarizer 506 or
by a CRT display with an added linear polarizer interposed, as is the
polarizer 506, between the CRT display and the dithering system 500. The
dithering system 500 includes a pair of double refracting or birefringent
material layers 508h, 508v, such as a calcite crystal material, separated
by a half wave plate 510. A wave plate 512, such as a quarter wave plate,
turns plane polarized light into circularly polarized light; circularly
polarized light can mathematically be resolved into equal amplitudes of
vertical and horizontal plane polarization separated in phase by
90.degree.. Thus, the quarter wave plate in a sense separates incident
plane polarized light into relatively orthogonal plane polarized
components for delivery to the birefringent material 508h as an input for
the dithering system 500. The effect of the passive dithering system 500
can be to enhance the resolution of the display output by reducing fixed
pattern noise in the display. The passive dithering system 500 can
increase the number of output pixels provided simultaneously by an
optical display system.
[0192] In FIG. 24a a very generalized example of the function of the
passive dithering system 500 is shown considering an image 520a created
by a single pixel 520 of the flat panel liquid crystal display 504
separated from adjacent pixels 522 in the display by optical dead space
524. The birefringent material 508h effectively creates a double image
520b of the image 520a which is displaced or dithered in, for example, a
horizontal direction, as is shown in FIG. 24b. The second birefringent
material 508v, which receives both images 520a and 520b, creates a second
pair of images 520c, 520d displaced vertically from the first pair of
images as is shown in FIG. 24c. In this way, the image produced by a
single pixel, such as exemplary pixel 520, can be made to fill or at
least to increase the fill of the optical dead space 524 between the
pixels 522 which is typically used to electrically isolate adjacent
pixels and to accommodate circuitry and electrical components. In other
words, the dithering system 500 increases the fill factor of the display
502 as viewed. Therefore, the passive dithering system 500 expands or
enlarges the respective pixels. In the example of FIGS. 24a, 24b, 24c,
the pixel 520a can be said to have been expanded or enlarged to cover the
area shown in FIG. 24c being occupied by images 520a, b, c, d.
[0193] If desired, the locations at which the passively dithered or
created images 520b, c, d are placed may be other than or in addition to
the optical dead space 524. For example, such image may be placed to
overlap another image or pixel, to overlap several images or pixels,
image(s) and optical dead space, etc., for example, as is described
further below.
[0194] One possible manner of orienting the axes of the optical components
of the passive dithering system 500 in the optical display system 501 is
shown in FIG. 25a. The linear polarizer 506 or polarized display output
is oriented vertically so that an image of a pixel emerging from the
polarizer or display will be linearly polarized in a vertical direction,
as is shown at pixel 520a in FIG. 25b. In FIGS. 25b-g the respective
arrows represent direction or plane of polarization of light. The quarter
wave plate 512 is aligned with its axis 512' at 45.degree. to the plane
of polarization of the plane (linearly) polarized light incident thereon,
e.g., from the polarizer 506. With this arrangement the quarter wave
plate 512 converts the incident plane polarized light to circularly
polarized light. Circularly polarized light in effect can be resolved
into two orthogonal plane polarized components 520a', 520a'' which are
out of phase by 90.degree., and such resolution is shown for pixel 520a
in FIG. 25c. The birefringent material 508h is arranged relative to the
linear polarizer 506 and quarter wave plate 512 with the projection of
its optic axis 508h' into the plane of the polarizer 506 and quarter wave
plate 512 being horizontal, e.g., parallel to the polarized light
component 520a'' and perpendicular to the polarized light component
520a'. The axis 510' of the half wave plate 510 is oriented at +22.5
degrees to vertical, and the second birefringent material 508v is
oriented with the projection of its optic axis 508v' into the plane of
the polarizer 506, etc. being vertical. It will be appreciated, however,
that this arrangement is only one of many possible arrangements of the
axes of the components which would produce the dithering or pixel
expanding or enlarging effect described herein and/or similar or
equivalent effects.
[0195] With further reference to FIGS. 25a-g, which additionally
illustrates the path of an image through the passive dithering system
500, the path of the exemplary pixel image 520a through the system will
be described in greater detail. As oriented, the linear polarizer 506
transmits optical information in the form of pixel images from pixels in
the display which have effected the light transmitted therethrough so as
to be polarized in the direction of the transmissive axis 506' of the
linear polarizer. For the exemplary image 520a in FIG. 25b, the light
would thus be polarized in a vertical direction represented by arrow
520a'.
[0196] Since the plane of polarization of the image 520a is at a 45 degree
angle to the optic axis 512' of the quarter wave plate 512, the quarter
wave plate converts the plane polarized incident light to circularly
polarized light. The circularly polarized light can be resolved or
considered as two plane polarized light components 520a', 520a'' (FIG.
25c) the planes of polarization of which are orthogonal and the phases of
which are 90.degree. out of phase. It will be appreciated that other
means or techniques may be used to divide the plane polarized light,
which is delivered to the birefringent material 508h, into plural
components which are acted on differently by the birefringent material,
for example acted on in the manner illustrated in FIGS. 25a-g or in some
other manner.
[0197] Since the plane of polarization 520a'' of some of the light
representing pixel 520a in FIG. 25c, which is incident on the
birefringent material 508h, is in the place of the optic axis 508h' and
encounters birefringence due to the tilting of the optic axis 508h' as
was described above, e.g., with respect to FIGS. 1-6, such light is
refracted by the birefringent material to form the pixel 520b at a
location displaced, for example, to the right from pixel 520a, as is seen
in FIG. 25d. Also, since the plane of polarization 520a' of some of the
light representing pixel 520a in FIG. 25c, which is incident on the
birefringent material, 508h, is perpendicular to the optic axis 508h',
the path of such light is not altered by the birefringent material, and
pixel 520a is located as is shown in FIG. 25d. Summarizing, as the
orthogonally related polarized components pass through the birefringent
material 508h, one of the polarized components will be refracted and
deflected horizontally while the other component will be unaffected. As a
result, the birefringent material 508h will yield two images, an image
520a in its original location and a horizontally displaced image 520b
with the images being polarized orthogonally to one another.
[0198] The images 520a and 520b then pass through the next optical
component in the passive dithering system 500, the half wave plate 510,
where the plane of polarization of each of the images 520a and 520b is
effectively rotated +45 degrees so that the plane of polarization of each
image is as shown in FIG. 25e. The polarizations represented by arrows
520a''' and 520b'' for pixel images 520a, 520b in FIG. 25e are the vector
equivalents to the polarizations represented by the respective arrows
520a', 520a'', 520b', 520b'' for pixels 520a, 520b in FIG. 25f. Two of
such vector equivalent polarizations of FIG. 25f are parallel to the
optic axis 508v' of the second birefringent material 508v, and two are
perpendicular to the optical axis 508v'. Due to such relationships of the
planes of polarization of each of the images 520a and 520b in FIG. 25f to
the axis 508v' of the birefringent material 508v, the images 520a and
520b will be resolved into their orthogonally polarized components 520c,
520d, respectively, as these components pass through the birefringent
material 508v. The polarized components of each image 520a, 520b which
are parallel (520a', 520b''') to the plane containing the axis 508v' will
be refracted and deflected vertically to result in images 520c and 520d
while the other polarized components 520a'', 520b', which are
perpendicular to the axis 508v' (or the plane containing that axis) will
be unaffected. As a result, the original image 520a is dithered into four
images 520a, 520b, 520c and 520d. These images may be of substantially
equal intensity.
[0199] While the passive dithering system 500 discussed above was
illustrated as doubling images in two directions, horizontal and
vertical, a passive dithering system that doubles the image in only a
single direction only is also possible. Such a system may include a
single birefringent material used in conjunction with a display producing
a polarized or non-polarized output to result in a doubled pixel image or
to perform passive line doubling.
[0200] Also, it will be appreciated that the above description with
respect to FIGS. 23, 24a-c, and 25a-g is exemplary, and other
arrangements of components to compose a passive dithering system to
obtain a desired pixel enlarging, expanding, shifting, etc. may be
employed. For example, a birefringent liquid crystal cell may be used as
a wave plate: a surface mode liquid crystal (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. Re.
32,521) cell or a pi-cell liquid crystal cell (e.g., U.S. Pat. No.
4,582,396) which is tuned to the desired retardation of quarter wave or
half wave are examples. The birefringent material may be liquid crystal
cells. Various crystals, prisms, or other devices may be used to provide
birefringence and/or polarizing functions. By changing the amount of
birefringence and optical path length through a birefringent material the
amount of deflection of a pixel image can be determined. Changing
relative orientation of axis of one or more components can change the
direction a pixel is shifted. Of course, the illustrated alignment of
components is relative and reference to vertical, horizontal, into or out
of the plane of the paper or drawing only is for convenience of
description. All such equivalent and alternate or additional materials
and/or alignments of components and functional operation are considered
within the scope of the present invention.
[0201] As is evident from the description above with respect to FIGS.
23-25 and the description below with respect to FIGS. 26-32, in an
exemplary passive dithering system of the invention, birefringent
material may be used to change location of light representing a pixel, an
image of a pixel, or another optical signal (for convenience sometimes
simply referred to as pixel). The passive dithering system, therefore, is
able to change the apparent location of the pixel. Such change may result
in an increase in or enlarging of the pixel size, in a doubling or
duplicating of the pixel, etc; such change in location may simply be a
change in the apparent location of the pixel without any doubling,
duplicating, changing of size, etc.
[0202] When the passive dithering system is used to dither a pixel to
change size, e.g., effectively to enlarge the pixel, the dithering system
may cause there to be multiple spaced apart pixels derived from the
original pixel or pixels. Alternatively, one or more of the multiple
pixels may overlap or be sufficiently adjacent to another pixel as to be
considered touching or in any event not spaced apart. As an example, by
enlarging a pixel to cover optical dead space of a display, the apparent
resolution of the display usually is increased even without increasing
the actual number of pixels driven by the display.
[0203] In the case of a pixel being expanded using an exemplary passive
dithering system according to the invention, light from the original
pixel is distributed over a viewed area that is larger than the area of
the original pixel of the display. However, the total amount of light
reaching the eye of an observer, for example, remains substantially the
same as that provided by the original pixel before being expanded because
the components of the passive dithering system are not the light
absorbing or blocking type. Therefore, the apparent brightness of a
display when used in combination with such a passive dithering system
would tend not to be diminished.
[0204] The passive dithering system of the invention is described with
respect to several embodiments. These embodiments are examples of
components and arrangements of components to obtain the passive dithering
effect of the invention. Many other components and arrangements of
components also may be used to obtain passive dithering, as will be
appreciated by those who have ordinary skill in the art.
[0205] For example, in the embodiments of passive dithering systems
illustrated in FIGS. 23-27 a half wave plate is used to set up particular
plane polarization conditions, such as direction of plane of
polarization; and in the embodiments illustrated in FIGS. 28-32 a quarter
wave plate is used to set up particular plane polarization conditions. In
the embodiments of passive dithering systems illustrated in FIGS. 23-25
and 28-30 the passive dithering systems receive plane polarized light
input from a liquid crystal display that provides plane polarized light
output or from another display which may not provide a plane polarized
light output but which is used in combination with a plane polarizer to
obtain the desired polarized light input to the dithering system.
However, in the embodiments illustrated in FIGS. 26, 27, 31 and 32 the
passive dithering systems receive and operate on unpolarized light.
[0206] The components of the respective passive dithering systems
described with respect to FIGS. 23-32 are arranged to expand a single
pixel or light forming that pixel to four pixels which are arranged in a
two by two rectilinear array, such as that depicted by pixels 524a-d in
FIG. 24c. However, it will be appreciated by those who have ordinary
skill in the art that the passive dithering systems of the invention may
be adjusted, including changing of optical axes orientations, changing of
birefringence value, adding or deleting components, etc., to expand the
single pixel to fewer or to more than four pixels and to arrange those
pixels in a rectilinear array or in another pattern or arrangement. Also,
although quarter wave plates and half wave plates are disclosed useful in
passive dithering systems, it will be appreciated that other types of
wave plates or appropriate means may be used, too. Preferably the wave
plates and/or other appropriate means provide the same or substantially
the same wave plate function, such as optical retardation, for all, for a
relatively wide range of wavelengths of light or at least for the
wavelength range intended to be used.
[0207] Using the principles of the invention to expand a pixel formed of
plane polarized light, the incident plane polarized light is divided into
two orthogonally related plane polarized components. A quarter wave plate
may be used for this function. A quarter wave plate having its optic axis
aligned at 45.degree. to the plane of polarization of incident plane
polarized light converts the plane polarized light to circular polarized
light, which can be resolved to orthogonally related plane polarized
components which are of equal amplitude but are out of phase by
90.degree.. If the quarter wave plate is oriented at other than
45.degree. to the plane of the incident plane polarized light, the output
therefrom will be elliptically polarized, which also may be resolved to
respective plane polarized components possibly with phases that differ by
other than 90.degree. and/or amplitudes which are not equivalent. Means
other than a quarter wave plate also may be used to effect such
separating of the incident plane polarized light into respective
distinguishable components. The incident plane polarized light, which is
resolved to respective distinguishable components, is directed to the
birefringent material, which separates the components in effect by
directing them to different locations and thereby expands the apparent
area of the pixel.
[0208] For unpolarized light input to a passive dithering system of the
invention used, for example, to expand a pixel, the incident light is
directed to birefringent material usually without the need to plane
polarize the incident light. Since the incident light already includes or
can be considered as being resolved to two orthogonally related plane
polarized components, the birefringent material separates the respective
orthogonally plane polarized components in, effect by directing them to
different locations and thereby expands the apparent area of the pixel.
[0209] Referring to FIG. 26, there is shown a passive dithering system
500' of an optical display system 501' used in connection with a display
532 which produces non-polarized (unpolarized) light, such as a nematic
curvilinear aligned phase liquid crystal (NCAP), polymer dispersed liquid
crystal (PDLC) or liquid crystal polymer composite (LCPC) based flat
panel liquid crystal display. The passive dithering system 500' of FIG.
26 includes the same optical components as the dithering system 500
described above relative to FIG. 23-25, such as a birefringent material
508h, a wave plate 510 and a second birefringent material 508v. In this
instance, neither the passive dithering system 500' nor the display 532
is provided with a linear polarizer to polarize the output light from the
display.
[0210] In operation, the passive dithering system 500' when used in
connection with a display producing non-polarized light will result in
horizontal and vertical pixel image doubling similar to that produced by
the passive dithering system 500 and shown in FIGS. 23-25. In fact, the
orientations of the optic axes 508h', 510' and 508v' of the components
508h, 510, 508v, shown in FIGS. 26 and 27 may be the same as when those
components are used in connection with a display producing a polarized
output. (If it were desired to use the dithering system 500 with an
unpolarized light producing display 532, the polarizer 506 could be
placed optically between the display 532 and the dithering system 500 in
the manner shown in FIGS. 23-25, for example).
[0211] One possible set of orientations for the optic axes of these
components is shown in FIG. 27. The optic axis 508v' of the first
birefringent material 508v is vertical and is tipped as was described
above, the axis 510' of the half wave plate 510 is at +22.5.degree. to
vertical and the projection of the optic axis 508h' of the second
birefringent material 508h into the plane of the page is horizontal and
is tipped as was described above. Although the light which enters the
first birefringent material 508v is non-polarized, it can be visualized
as polarized light resolved into two orthogonal components such as a
vertical and horizontal polarized component as shown by arrows in the
exemplary pixel image 534a created by a corresponding pixel 534 in the
display 532.
[0212] The components 508v, 510 and 508h then function basically as
described above in FIG. 25. The first birefringent material 508v will
resolve the individual components of the pixel image 534a into their
orthogonal components and will dither (shift location of) one polarized
component relative to the other polarized component to produce a
vertically displaced double image of the pixel image 534a. The half wave
plate 510 will then rotate the polarization components of those images as
in FIG. 25e so they are at 45.degree. angles to the optic axis 508h' of
the second birefringent material 508h where the images will be doubled
and displaced in a horizontal direction as in FIG. 25g. As a result, the
initial image 534a is doubled in the vertical direction and then the
initial image and the doubled image are doubled in the horizontal
direction to produce four adjacent images which may substantially cover
the portion of the original pixel 534a in the display and dead space
surrounding the pixel in one vertical and horizontal direction.
[0213] FIG. 28 illustrates an alternate embodiment of a passive dithering
system 540 of an optical display system 541 shown with an optical display
which produces linearly polarized output light, such as by a twisted
nematic based flat panel liquid crystal display 542 incorporating a
linear polarizer 544. The passive dithering system 540 includes a first
birefringent material 546v, a second birefringent material 546h and
quarter wave plates 548, 549, respectively, interposed between the source
of polarized light (display 542 and, if used, polarizer 544) and the
first birefringent material 546v and between the birefringent materials
546h and 546v. One possible set of orientations for the axes of the
linear polarizer 544 of the display, the birefringent materials 546v and
546h and the quarter wave plates 548, 549 is shown in FIG. 29. The linear
polarizer 544 has a transmissive axis in the vertical direction. The
projection of the optic axis of the first birefringent material 546h into
the plane of the transmission axis of the linear polarizer also is
vertical, i.e., parallel to the axis of the polarizer. The axes of the
quarter wave plates 548, 549 are oriented +45.degree. to vertical and the
projection of the optic axis of the second birefringent material 546h
into the plane of the linear polarizer is at +90.degree. to vertical,
i.e., horizontal.
[0214] The passive dithering system 540 functions basically the same way
as the passive dithering system 500 is described above relative to FIG.
25. The function of the half wave plate 510 in the passive dithering
system 500 has been replaced in the system 540 by a quarter wave plate
549. The quarter wave plate 548 and birefringent material 546v function
as the quarter wave plate 512 and birefringent material 508h of FIGS.
23-25. The quarter wave plate 549 effectively divides the polarized light
components of light passing through the wave plate 549 by converting the
light to circularly polarized light and its respective equivalent
orthogonal plane polarized components like the quarter wave plates 512,
548 do. The components of the circularly polarized light are then
dithered by the second birefringent material 546h in a horizontal
direction as explained above for the passive dithering system 500. One
advantage of using the quarter wave plate 549 as opposed to the half wave
plate 510 or 510' is that the quarter wave plate 549 will tend to
introduce less chromatic aberration on the light passing therethrough
since a quarter wave plate usually is thinner material than a half wave
plate and, therefore, usually is less dispersive, e.g., exhibits less
optical dispersion.
[0215] In FIGS. 30a-30e are shown the operation of the passive dithering
system 540 of FIGS. 28 and 29. In FIG. 30a a pixel 542a of display 542 is
shown. Light from pixel 542a is vertically polarized and is represented
by the vertical arrow therein. The linear polarization is produced by the
display 542 and/or is due to the polarizer 544. A separate polarizer 544
ordinarily is unnecessary if the display 542 produces polarized light
output. Optical dead space 550 surrounds the pixel 542a.
[0216] The quarter wave plate 548 divides the vertically polarized light
from the polarizer 544 to obtain two orthogonal plane polarized
components, as is seen in FIG. 30b. In FIG. 30c it can be seen that the
birefringent material 546v changes the location of the vertically
polarized light component portion of light incident thereon moving that
light vertically relative to the location of the vertically polarized
light component portion. Therefore, pixel 542a is expanded, e.g., is
doubled, in that pixel area 542b now has been created. The quarter wave
plate 549 divides (resolves) the plane polarized light from the
birefringent material 546v so that each pixel 542a, 542b has both
orthogonal plane polarized light components, e.g., horizontal and
vertical, as is shown in FIG. 30d. In the manner described above, the
double refracting material 546h expands, e.g., doubles, the pixels 542a,
542b to create pixel areas 542a, 542b, 542c, 542d shown in FIG. 30e.
[0217] FIGS. 31 and 32 illustrate a passive dithering system 540' which is
identical to the passive dithering system 540 shown in FIGS. 28-30 but it
is used in an optical display system 541' with a display producing
non-polarized (unpolarized) output light, such as an NCAP, PDLC or LCPC
based flat panel liquid crystal display 560 e.g., like the display 532
and pixels 534 of FIGS. 26 and 27. The orientation of the birefringent
materials 546v and 546h and the quarter wave plate 549, which are
represented in FIG. 32, may be the same as those described for the like
components for the passive dithering system 540 although it would be
appreciated that this is only one possible set of orientations for the
axes of the components which would dither an image in the manner
described above. The passive dithering system 540' functions in basically
the same way described above for the system 540 but on unpolarized input
light, which is resolved as orthogonally related plane polarized light
components (see the description above concerning FIGS. 26 and 27), as
opposed to the linearly polarized light which the system 540 receives
from the display 542.
[0218] It also will be appreciated that the several features and
embodiments of the invention illustrated and/or described herein may be
used with other features and embodiments that are illustrated and/or
described herein as well as equivalents thereof. For example, in the
segmented display system described the EDS may be formed by a calcite
crystal and a surface mode liquid crystal cell, by a calcite crystal and
a twisted nematic liquid crystal cell or by some other type of switch
and/or some other type of double refracting material. Also, the EDS may
be a liquid crystal EDS in which both the switch function and the double
refracting function can be carried out by the same device, e.g., as in
the embodiment of FIGS. 18 and 19. Moreover, in many instances passive
dithering systems may be used in conjunction with or as a substitute for
some of all of the components described for the EDS. These are simply
examples of combining features and it will be appreciated that other
combinations also may be made consistent with the spirit and scope of the
invention.
[0219] From the foregoing it will be appreciated that various embodiments
of the invention using principles described herein may be employed with
polarized light or unpolarized light. If it possible to operate based on
an unpolarized light as an input to the dithering system, e.g., using an
NCAP display, there is no need for a polarizer and the undesirable effect
that a polarizer has in blocking approximately 50% of the transmitted
light. It also will be appreciated that in various embodiments described
herein a quarter wave plate may be used, a half wave plate may be used,
and/or a combination thereof may be used. In various embodiments a half
wave plate may be substituted for one or more quarter wave plates and
vice versa. A quarter wave plate may be used to convert plane polarized
light to circular polarized light or to orthogonal components of plane
polarized light. A quarter wave plate also may be used to convert plane
polarized light to elliptically polarized light. A half wave plate is
used to rotate the plane of polarization of plane polarized light.
Usually the half wave plate will rotate the plane of polarization by
twice the angle between the plane of incident plane polarized light and
the axis of the half wave plate.
[0220] Turning to FIG. 33 an active dithering system 601 is used with a
display 602 in an optical display system 603. The dithering system
includes a birefringent material 610, such as a calcite crystal, having
an axis 610' that is oriented at an angle theta relative to horizontal,
as is depicted in FIG. 33. The dithering system 601 also includes a
switch 611, such as a birefringent liquid crystal cell of the type
described above. The display 602 may be a liquid crystal display that
provides plane polarized light output that has a vertical plane of
polarization represented by the arrow 602'. Alternatively, the display
602 may provide other than plane polarized light output, and in that case
a plane polarizer 612 may be used to provide such vertical polarization
of the light delivered from the display and polarizer to the switch 611.
The orientation of the axis of the birefringent liquid crystal switch 611
is at 45.degree. to the vertical plane of polarization 602', as is
represented by the arrow 611'. As was described, as the switch 611 is
energized or not, the plane of polarization of the light output therefrom
will be the same as the direction of the arrow 602' or not, i.e.,
vertical, or horizontal. A half wave plate 615 between the switch 611 and
the birefringent material 610 has its axis 615' oriented at an angle
relative to horizontal that is 1/2 theta.
[0221] With reference to FIGS. 33 and 34, which presents representative
operation of the dithering system 601, when the light transmitted through
the switch 611 has a given plane of polarization, such light will be
transmitted through the half wave plate 615 and birefringent plate
(calcite) 610 to appear at the same relative positions as they originally
appear in the display 602. If such pixels are, respectively, red, green
and blue pixels of a triad, such pixels may be at the locations of the
pixel images 620r, 620g, 620b shown in FIG. 34. However, when the plane
of polarization of the light exiting the switch 611 is such that it is
appropriately rotated by the half wave plate 615 so as to impinge on the
calcite 610 in a direction relative to the axis 610' to cause shifting of
the light output, such pixels will appear as images 620r', 620g', 620b'.
Thus, it will be seen that the offset or shifting is in a sense diagonal
rather than horizontal or vertical. The angle at which such diagonal
occurs relative to horizontal, for example, depends on the magnitude of
the angle theta. Thus, it will be appreciated by appropriately selecting
the angles of the respective axis of the components and their
relationship to each other, whereas desired directions of shifting can be
obtained. Also, the extent or distance of such shifting can be
determined, for example, by the thickness of the birefringent device 610,
i.e., the effect of optical thickness thereof having an affect on the
light transmitted therethrough.
[0222] Referring to FIGS. 35 and 36 and the Chart 1 below, an optical
display system 640, which includes two active dithering systems 641, 642
and one passive dithering system 643 is illustrated. The optical system
640 receives plane polarized light input 644 from a display 645. If the
display 645 is not the type that provides a plane polarized light output,
than an additional polarizer 646 may be used to provide such plane
polarization. The orientation of respective components of the display
system 640 is depicted by respective double-headed arrows above the
various components.
[0223] The display system 640 may be used to provide a video output
display operation. In an exemplary video display system, such as an NTSC
or PAL system, it is conventional to compose a picture or a frame from
two interlaced and sequentially presented fields (sometimes referred to
as sub-frames). The optical display is able to produce four output
conditions and signals in the manner described below. Such four output
conditions may correlate to two respective frames and the two respective
fields in each frame in a video display system, such as a television
system using a liquid crystal display or some other display as the image
source. However, it will be appreciated that the four output conditions
described below may be correlated with the operation of other types of
display systems or with a video display system in a way different from
the exemplary operation described below.
[0224] In the optical system 640 the active dithering system 641 includes
a switch 650 and a birefringent device 651. The active dithering system
642 includes a switch 652 and a birefringent device 653. The passive
dithering system 643 includes a quarter wave plate 654 and a third
birefringent device or material 655. The first and second switches 650,
652 may be respective surface mode birefringent liquid crystal cells or
some other switch as is described elsewhere herein. The first, second and
third birefringent devices 651, 653, 655 may be calcite material or some
other birefringent material having axis oriented generally in the manner
illustrated and tipped in the manner described above.
[0225] In describing operation of the optical display system 640,
reference is made to a pixel of the display and light representing that
pixel. The passive dithering system 643 effectively doubles the size of
the pixel received by it from the display 645 and via the respective
active dithering systems 641, 642. Therefore, as is seen in FIG. 36, each
pixel input to the passive dithering system 643 is shown in solid lines
and the doubled image thereof is shown in dotted lines adjacent thereto.
For example, the pixel provided the passive dithering system 643 for the
first field of the first frame is represented at 660, and the dithered
image 660' is shown adjacent thereto in dotted lines. The passive
dithering system operates in the manner of the passive dithering systems
described above, for example.
[0226] Referring to the Chart 1 below, at frame 1, field 1, the voltage or
energization of the first switch 650 is low so that the switch rotates
the plane of polarization of the input vertically polarized light to
horizontally polarized light as the output therefrom; see the column
labeled "polarization direction output 1" having the letter "H"
representing such horizontal polarization. Delivery of that horizontally
polarized light to the first calcite 651 results in no shift of location.
Continuing in the first line for frame 1, field 1 in the Chart 1 below,
the voltage of the second switch 652 is low, whereby that switch rotates
the plane of polarization back to vertical, as is represented by the
letter "V" in the column labeled polarization direction output 2; and,
therefore, the second calcite member 653 does not shift the location of
the pixel. When the vertically polarized light output from the second
calcite 653 enters the quarter wave plate 654, such light is divided into
horizontal and vertical polarized components; the vertically polarized
component transmits through the third calcite material 655, and the
horizontally polarized component is shifted horizontally thereby
effectively, doubling the size of the pixel and producing the image 660',
as is represented in the last column of the table designated calcite 3
shifting and doubling in the horizontal direction the particular pixel.
[0227] The second field of the first frame, for example, each pixel of the
second frame, is displaced vertically relative to the corresponding pixel
of the first field of the first frame. The pixel 661 represents the
location of such downwardly vertically displaced pixel for the second
field of the first frame when the display system is a video type using
interlaced fields to produce a frame. The second line of the Chart 1
below shows the conditions of the surface mode switches 650, 652, both
being at high voltage so as not to rotate the plane of polarization of
light transmitted therethrough, the resulting vertical downward
displacement caused by the first calcite 651, and the doubling of the
pixel by the passive dithering system 643 to produce not only pixel 661
but also the dithered pixel 661'. In pixels 660, 660', the two digits one
in each represent, respectively, first frame, first field; and in the
pixels 661, 661', the digits one and two represent first frame, second
field, respectively.
[0228] Lines three and four of the Chart 1 below represent conditions and
shifting resulting from those conditions of the switches 650, 652,
direction of plane of polarization, etc. as was described above with
respect to the first two lines of the Chart 1 below in order to achieve
pixels 662, 662' and 663, 663', the primed pixels representing the
dithered images that doubles the effective size of the overall pixel,
such as the doubled size 663 plus 663'. As was mentioned above, the
amount of shifting or translating of a particular pixel may be a function
of the birefringence and/or optical thickness of the respective
birefringent device, such as the respective calcite plates 651, 653, 655.
Also, in a conventional video system there usually is no horizontal
interlacing. The two field of the second frame represented by pixels 662,
662', 663, 663' may represent images moved to fill optical dead space,
images to effect super imposing respective colors, as is described
further below, or some other purpose. The increasingly effective size of
each pixel, such as by doubling it to increase pixel 660 to the effective
size of the sum of pixels 660, 660', can be used to improve resolution by
effectively covering optical dead space in the display. The vertical
displacing of pixels can be used to cause a liquid crystal display to
provide a true or more nearly true interlaced operation whereby a pixel
presented in one field of a frame is presented at a different location
when the second field of that same frame is produced.
[0229] An advantage to the use of a dithering system with a display, such
as a liquid crystal display, wherein the location of a pixel in the
output can be shifted even though the actual location of the pixel in the
display itself, such as an LCD, remains fixed is that correct data can be
used to drive the pixel to provide the desired image output with
relatively accurate following of the video signal. In a conventional LCD
used to provide a video output a particular pixel may average the two
fields of a frame; the average is not an accurate representation of the
data received from the video signal. However, using a dithering system in
accordance with the present invention, a pixel of the LCD may be driven
based on information from the video signal intended to drive that pixel
for a particular field of a frame to provide a visual output from the
display system, such as display system 640. Subsequently when the image
output of the respective pixel is shifted so that it is in the location
desired for the second field of the particular frame, the actual
information from the video signal that ordinarily would be used, say in a
CRT, for example, could be the information that is used to operate or to
drive the pixel which then provides a relatively accurate output
representative of the appropriate input signal.
[0230] Using the two active and one passive dithering systems of the
optical display system 640 is it possible to obtain eight copies of the
original image, if desired, namely that provided at pixel 660, for
example. Such eight copies may be obtained for every field for every
frame, if desired and, thus, provide a macro pixel effectively about
eight times the size of the pixel 660. In another embodiment, the data
picked off the incoming analog signal or other video signal that operates
the pixel 660, e.g., to turn it on or off, may be selected at the
appropriate time to drive the pixel 660; and subsequently the pixel 661
may be operated as a function of information picked off the incoming
video or analog signal representing the desired operation of the pixel
661 for interlaced fields operation of a conventional NTS or PAL system.
However, additionally, if desired, the information from the incoming
signal also could be picked off to represent the on/off or intensity
effect of a pixel presented at location of pixel 662 accurately to
represent that pixel even though that pixel physically may not be in the
display 645 but rather is represented by the pixel of the display 645
that produces pixel image 660 shifted to the location of pixel 662. In
other words, in an exemplary LCD there may be two relatively adjacent
pixels, and the information from the incoming video signal would be
picked off from that video signal to drive the respective pixels at the
appropriate times. However, there also may be information contained in
the video signal that would represent a desired optical output from the
optical display system 640 from a pixel located between the two mentioned
pixels. The present invention allows the information from the video
signal that would be used to drive such intermediate pixel to be
delivered to the pixel of the display 645 that would produce pixel image
660 while the dithering systems in the optical display system 640 effect
horizontal or lateral displacement of the optical output to a location
where such intermediate pixel might otherwise appear in the output image
from the optical display system 640. This operation can enhance the
resolution provided by the optical display system 640 and the accuracy of
representation of the information carried by the input video signal, etc.
Superimposed Color Operation
[0231] Referring to FIG. 37 there is a shown a layout of an exemplary
group of red, green and blue pixels of an exemplary liquid crystal
display. The pixels are arranged in respective parallel rows and columns.
Capital letters represent the color of the pixel, e.g., whether the pixel
will deliver output like that is red, green or blue. Portions of two rows
are shown.
[0232] In the viewing of a color liquid crystal display the eye of the
viewer, i.e., a human eye, may receive light input from many different
pixels, and the eye effectively integrates the light inputs. One way of
considering such viewing is to analogize the adjacent pixels, which are
extremely small, effectively being superimposed so that the light
therefrom is superimposed. Therefore, the combination of red, green and
blue light that is superimposed would provide a white light as seen by
the viewer.
[0233] The various embodiments of dithering systems in accordance with the
present invention, including those disclosed and equivalents thereof, may
be used to effect real superimposing of respective pixels, thereby
enhancing the color output or color response of a color liquid crystal
display. Such superimposition is depicted in FIG. 37 and now is
described. The two rows of pixels shown in FIG. 37 are portions of
respective rows of pixels in a color liquid crystal display. In the first
row shown there are five pixels of the indicated colors; and in the
second row there also are five pixels of the indicated colors. The
sequence of colors is red, green and blue in both rows, but the sequence
is offset by one pixel one row to the other. Therefore, in the first
(top) row the first pixel row, and in the second row the first pixel is
green. The arrangement of pixels in FIG. 37 is exemplary. Many other
types of arrangements of pixels may be used whether in parallel rows and
columns in the manner shown, in a so called delta configuration or
pattern wherein there is an offset of rows, such as in FIG. 40, etc.
[0234] Using the optical display system 640, for example, the red pixel Ra
at the top left of FIG. 37 is duplicated by the passive dithering system
643 to produce a red pixel or ra, which is represented in dash lines.
Operation of the first dithering system 641 produces a second copy of
both those red pixels displaced downward to locations of dash red pixels
designated ra'. Such operation of the first dithering system 641 is
coordinated with the second dithering system 642 to effect such downward
shift. Similarly, horizontal shifting of all four red pixels just
mentioned, namely Ra, ra, and the two designated ra' to a horizontally
shifted or laterally shifted place results in the red pixels represented
by dash lines and designated ra'', one of which is superimposed over the
green pixel Ga and one of which is superimposed on the blue pixel Ba.
Such shifting may occur in a time sequence that is sufficiently fast that
the human eye does not perceive the various shifts. Additionally, such
shifting occurs in a time sequence coordinated with the desired color
output from the display as represented by the input video signals to the
display so that the superimposed colors provide a good quality and
accurate representation of the color output from the display intended as
a result of the input video signal. Similarly to the just described
shifting of the red pixel Ra, shifting of the green pixel Ga also occurs,
and such shifted pixels are represented by dotted outline at pixel
locations represented by Ga due to the passive dithering system 643, and
the other shifted pixels represented by dotted lines labeled ga' and ga''
resulting from coordinated operation of the active dithering systems 641,
642. Furthermore, similar operation occurs for the blue pixel Ba, which
is represented by phantom lines at pixels or pixel locations designed ba,
ba', and ba''. The four blue pixels represented by respective
designations ba' and ba'' near the bottom of FIG. 37 would overly or be
superimposed on other pixels which are not shown in order to simplify the
drawing and description.
[0235] Briefly referring to FIG. 38, shifting of the red pixel R into
respective gaps and also superimposed on other pixels is shown
schematically and simply. Specifically, pixel R is doubled by the passive
dithering system 643 of the optical display system 640 in FIG. 35, for
example to provide pixel r. Both pixels R and r are duplicated also at
pixel image locations r' shown in FIG. 38 in the gap between respective
parallel rows of actual pixels. Pixels R, r and r' also are duplicated to
the right relative to the illustration of FIG. 38 as pixel images r'',
some of which are in the same gap as pixel images r' and one of which
overlies or is superimposed on the green pixel G. Thus, it will be seen
that the pixels can be shifted to various locations in the display to
achieve the desired optical output.
[0236] As the display of FIG. 38 is operated as part of the optical
display system 640 to duplicate pixel images and/or to translate pixel
images, so, too, the display shown in FIG. 39 represents similar modified
operation of the optical display system 640. In particular, in FIG. 39
lateral shifting occurs like that in FIG. 38; but in FIG. 39 the vertical
shifting of images results in the shifted image overlying the gap between
adjacent rows of pixels of the display 645 and also overlying at least a
portion of the pixel of the display 645 which is vertically displaced
beyond such gap between pixel rows. Placing the pixel image in a gap
increases the fill factor of the display. As was mentioned above, the
shifting may result in superimposing pixel images to achieve the
superimposed color response described above. Also, if desired, the
vertical shifting may result in a portion of the shifted pixel image
still overlapping a portion of the image in the original row, such as the
illustrated pixel R and shifted pixel image r' therebelow. Such
superimposing of pixels may provide a desired type of visual output for
the optical display system 340.
[0237] Briefly referring to FIGS. 40 and 41, there is shown a delta design
of pixel layout for a display in FIG. 40, such as an LCD 645 and the
output images therefrom after transmitting through an optical display
system 680, which includes one active dithering system 681 and two
passive dithering systems 682, 683. The active dithering system 681
includes a switch, 684, such as a birefringent liquid crystal cell, and a
calcite crystal 685 able to transmit an image or to shift the image
vertically 1/2 pixel, depending on the direction of plane of polarization
of light incident thereon. The passive dithering system 682 includes a
half wave plate 686, which rotates the plane of polarization of incident
light 45 degrees, and a second calcite crystal 687, which can transmit
the incident pixel image and has a thickness, birefringence, axial
orientation and tipped to displace the image 1/2 triad pitch
horizontally. The passive dithering system 683 includes a half wave plate
688, which rotates the plane of polarization of incident light 45
degrees, and a second calcite crystal 689, which can transmit the
incident pixel image and has a thickness, birefringence and axial
orientation and tip to be able to displace the image 1 pixel pitch
horizontally.
[0238] The optical display system 680 and dithering systems 681, 682, 683
thereof are set up to effect shifting 1/2 triad pitch to the right; 1
pixel pitch left and 1/2 pixel vertical pitch down. This arrangement is
represented by only the blue pixel Ba. In shifting that pixel 1/2 triad
pitch to the right, pixel ba results. In shifting both pixel Ba and ba 1
pixel pitch to the left, two respective pixel images ba' are
produced--one is superimposed over the green pixel G, and one is in the
gap between the blue pixel Ba and the red pixel R horizontally adjacent
to the blue pixel Ba. Such shifting provides both for filling the
optically dead space and effecting a superimposing of respective color
pixel images as was described above. The shifting of pixel images
vertically to form the four pixel images ba'' places some of those in the
gaps between rows of pixels and some in superimposed relation to the same
and/or other pixels or shifted pixel images.
[0239] Referring to FIG. 42, a person 704 is shown wearing a head mounted
viewing system 705 in accordance with the present invention. The viewing
system may be part of a virtual reality viewing system having one or more
displays which are viewed by the person. The viewing system may be part
of a telecommunications system, entertainment system, or some other
device in which light, optical, etc. information can be presented for
viewing, projecting, p
hotographing, or other use. Exemplary systems in
which the invention may be used are disclosed in the above-mentioned
patent applications; of course there may be other uses, too.
[0240] The head mounted viewing system 705 includes a housing 705h in
which the various components of the viewing system 705 are included, and
a mounting device 705m, such as a strap, eyeglass or goggles type frame
support structure, etc. The mounting device 705m mounts the housing 705h
for support from the head of the individual 704 placing the viewing
system 705 in position in front of one of the eyes for viewing of an
image presented by the viewing system 705. Whether the viewing system 705
is hand held, head mounted, or otherwise supported, for example, from a
pedestal, tripod, frame, etc., from a table, from the floor, from a
console 9, etc., preferably the viewing system 705 and housing 705h
thereof is relatively small and sufficiently lightweight to facilitate
moving, transporting, mounting, and/or holding. If the viewing system 705
is to be hand held or head mounted, it especially should be relatively
lightweight to avoid being a weight burden on the hand or head of the
individual using the viewing system 705. Also, to facilitate holding the
viewing system 705 manually or head mounting the viewing system, the
viewing system 705 should be relatively small. An exemplary viewing
system may be, for example, approximately 4 to 5 inches in height,
approximately 2 to 3 inches wide, and approximately 11/2 to 2 inches
deep. These are exemplary only, and it will be appreciated that other
dimensions may be used.
[0241] In using the viewing system 705 it may be head mounted, hand held,
coupled to a control box, console or the like, for example, similar to
the main body of the conventional telephone when used in a
telecommunication system.
[0242] Turning to FIG. 43, the viewing system 705 is shown in detail as a
monocular viewing system. The housing 705h includes a viewing portion 711
and a support portion 712. The viewing portion 711 is intended to be
viewed by an eye 713 of a person 704 (FIG. 42), and the support portion
712 is intended to be held in the hand of that individual. As was
mentioned above, a head mount 705m may be provided to support the viewing
system 705 from the head of a person. Thus, the housing 705h may be hand
held, supported by a strap, cap, temple piece as in eyeglasses, or
otherwise mounted for viewing by a person.
[0243] The viewing system 705 includes an optical system 714 in the
housing 705h. The optical system 714 includes an image source 715, such
as an LCD, that provides images for viewing by the eye 713 through a
viewing port 716. A viewing lens 717 (or group of lens) presents to the
eye 713 an image which appears at a comfortable viewing distance, such as
about 20 inches or more away. An image resolution enhancing device 18
(sometimes referred to as an optical line doubler or OLD, dithering
device or system, EDS, etc.) optionally included in the optical system
714 may be used to enhance the resolution or other qualities of the image
produced by the image source 715.
[0244] A number of optical components 720 are included in the optical
system 714. The optical components include focusing optics 721 (sometimes
referred to simply as "lens" or as projection optics or as a projector),
a beam splitter 722, and one or more retroreflectors 23, 23'.
[0245] The image source 715 includes a display 724d and a source of
incident light 724i. The light source illuminates the display 724d, and
the display in turn presents images which can be projected for viewing by
the eye 713, as will be described in greater detail below. It will be
appreciated that other types of image sources may be used, examples being
cathode ray tube displays, other liquid crystal displays, plasma
displays, etc. Examples of several displays and light sources are
presented in the above-referenced co-pending patent applications. A
connection cable 28 provides electrical and/or optical signals and/or
power to the optical system 714, and is particular to the image source
715 and OLD 18 to develop the above-mentioned images for viewing by the
eye 713. A control system 729 is coupled to the cable to provide such
electrical signals for controlling operation of the display system 705,
as is described in further detail below.
[0246] Summarizing such controlled operation, though, the display 724d may
be a twisted nematic liquid crystal display, and the OLD 18 includes an
optical switch, such as a surface mode liquid crystal cell, that switches
polarization characteristics of light to cause the light output to viewed
by the eye 713 to be, for example, of enhanced resolution, as is
described further below. Therefore, the control system 729 provides
signals to generate the image by the display 724d; and the control system
729 also controls the optical switch to effect a synchronization such
that there is a phase or time delay between the signals to the twisted
nematic LCD and the signals to the optical switch. Accordingly, the
optical switch which operates at a different speed, e.g., faster or in
shorter time than the twisted nematic LCD will be coordinated with the
operation of the twisted nematic LCD to improve operation and optical
output of the display system 705. Detailed operation of the control
system is described further below, for example, with respect to FIGS.
44-46 and 48.
[0247] Dithering may refer to the physical displacement of an image. The
dithering system 718 may be an electro-optical dithering system (EDS),
which refers to an electro-optical means to physically shift or to change
the location of an optical signal, such as an image. The shifting may
result in doubling of the number of pixels or scan lines of a
display--thus, reference to OLD (optical line doubler). The shifting also
may result in quadrupling (or more or less increase) pixels or scan
lines; and in such case OLD also may be used as a generic label. The
shifting may be active in response to an electrical, magnetic or other
input. The dithering system 718 may be passive, e.g., in which shifting
occurs constantly or substantially constantly (or continuously); in other
words such shifting may occur all the time without the need for a
separate input to cause shifting. Various embodiments of dithering
systems useful in the invention are described above.
[0248] The image may be shifted along an axis from one location to another
and then back to the first, e.g. up and then down, left and then right,
or both, etc. The optical signal may be moved in another direction. The
dithering may be repetitive or periodic or it may be asynchronous in
moving an image from one location to another and then holding it there,
at least for a set or non-predetermined time. Also, as was mentioned, the
dithering may be passive, and, thus, constant, e.g., without changing.
When the dithering is passive there usually are provided simultaneously
the original image at the undithered location and a second or dithered
image at another location, e.g., located adjacent or spaced apart from
the undithered image.
[0249] Referring to FIG. 44, the top line A in the graph represents an
electrical signal, namely the voltage applied to a given display pixel
(sometimes referred to as picture element or component) as a function of
time. The pixel may be a part of a twisted nematic type LCD, such as part
of the display 724d, especially an active matrix LCD, although the pixel
may be a part of some other type of display, optical device, etc. When
the voltage is applied to an active matrix display, it results in an
electric field being applied across the liquid crystal material causing a
particular type of operation, e.g., alignment with respect to the field
or when no field is applied relaxing to an alignment which may be
influenced, for example, by the surfaces, surface coatings, etc., of the
liquid crystal cell or device forming LCD. The voltage A illustrated in
FIG. 44 is applied at a frequency of 60 Hz.
[0250] The second line B in FIG. 44 represents the desired light
transmission characteristic of an ideal pixel as a function of time. In
the illustrated example, the pixel is switched between clear (sometimes
referred to as the white state) and dark (sometimes referred to as the
black state). As illustrated, the clear state would occur when the
voltage A is high, and the dark state would occur when the voltage A is
high.
[0251] In the illustrated case of an ideal pixel in FIG. 44, the pixel
switches transmission B from dark to clear at the same time the voltage
switches from high to low. That is, the ideal pixel switches in phase
with the applied voltage A. Furthermore, in the OLD or EDS 1, etc. (FIGS.
1, 2-6, 11-12, etc.) hereof (hereinafter referred to as EDS 1 for brevity
although such reference includes the various embodiments of active and
passive dithering systems disclosed herein), the position of the pixel
changes by switching the voltage applied to the surface mode birefringent
liquid crystal cell, optical switch or polarization rotator 11 (FIGS. 1,
5 and 6, for example). Therefore, it follows that in the ideal case,
i.e., for use with the ideal pixel, the voltage applied to the optical
switch 11 also would be switched synchronously with the voltage A applied
to the ideal pixel and in phase.
[0252] However, a real liquid crystal display 20, 724d utilizing the
twisted nematic effect cannot switch between transmission states as
rapidly as indicated in the second line B of FIG. 44. For example, the
active matrix liquid crystal display used in the Sony XC-M07 monitor can
switch from dark to clear in about 20 milliseconds and from clear to dark
in about 11 milliseconds. Switching time is defined conventionally as the
time required for the transmission to change between 10% and 90% of the
final values. This real switching behavior is illustrated in the third
line C of FIG. 44. In this third line C depicting light transmission, the
transmission of the clear state has been normalized to 100% and the
transmission of the dark state has been normalized to 0%. It will be
appreciated that the graph line C is schematic only, and the precise
times mentioned above are not necessarily accurate.
[0253] In FIG. 45 the graphs present information similar to that presented
in the graphs of FIG. 44 except that in the graphs of FIG. 45 the
frequency of the applied voltage A' to the pixel, e.g., of the display
724d, is doubled to 120 Hz. The transmission B' of the ideal pixel in
FIG. 45 is shown synchronized and in phase with the applied voltage A'.
However, the actual transmission C' of a real pixel is illustrated in the
third line of FIG. 45. As is shown, within the available time of
respective half cycles of the applied voltage A', the real pixel is able
to switch transmission between about 25% and 75%. This means that the
contrast ratio would be reduced by a factor of about one half (1/2)
compared to the 60 Hz case of FIG. 44. This behavior is characteristic of
many twisted nematic effect LCDs; starting at a modulation of about 60
Hz. every increase in the frequency of the applied voltage by a factor of
two (2) usually results in a reduction in the contrast ratio by a factor
of about one half (1/2).
[0254] Referring to FIG. 46, line A'' represents the applied voltage to
the pixel at 120 Hz. The second line C'' represents the transmission
response of a real pixel of an active matrix twisted nematic LCD. Note
that line C'' is similar to line C' in FIG. 45. A guide line D has been
drawn in the graph of line C'' in FIG. 46 at 50% transmission. That
portion of a particular frame, in which the real pixel is presenting an
image of clear or dark, having a transmission greater than 50% is defined
here as the clear state. That portion of the frame having a transmission
less than 50% is defined here as the dark state. As seen, the real pixel
does shutter light at 120 Hz but the transmission modulates between 25%
and 75% rather than the 0% to 100% experienced when the frequency of the
applied voltage signal A was 60 Hz. in FIG. 44.
[0255] Another feature of the 120 Hz response of the real pixel is shown
in FIG. 46. Consider the point marked along the time scale by the double
headed arrow E. The bottom part of the arrow E indicates the point in
time that the transmission of the real pixel switches from dark to clear;
the top of the arrow E indicates the corresponding applied voltage. It
can be seen that the applied voltage A'' is out of phase with the
transmission characteristics of the pixel, i.e., when the real pixel
switches between what is considered the clear state and the black state,
by 90.degree..
[0256] In the present invention the EDS 1 may be adjusted to introduce a
similar phase shift in the voltage F (FIG. 46) applied to the optical
switch 11. An exemplary optical switch 11 is a surface mode birefringent
liquid crystal cell. Such device usually can switch between states in
response to a change in input signal much faster than does a twisted
nematic liquid crystal cell or LCD. Therefore, by introducing the
indicated phase shift in the driving of the surface mode liquid crystal
cell and the twisted nematic LCD, the optical switch can be coordinated
to switch optically at the same time that the LCD 724d, for example,
switches optically from what is considered its clear state to what is
considered its dark state or vice versa. As a result, as the EDS 1
operates in coordination with the LCD 724d, for example, to crispness or
sharpness of the output image can be improved and there is less
likelihood of a bleeding effect between images produced by pixels which
are periodically optically shifted using the dithering principles of an
OLD or the like.
[0257] After the phase of the surface mode liquid crystal cell optical
switch 11 has been adjusted as described, the contrast of the display
724d would be reduced by a factor of about one half (1/2) when the
display is optically doubled and one fourth (1/4) when the display is
optically quadrupled. The decrease in contrast is due to the increased
frequency at which the display liquid crystal cell (LCD) is driven, not
due to the EDS or how it is driven. It has been found that the contrast
reduction is nearly undetectable by the human eye and, therefore, has
been found acceptable for many applications.
[0258] It will be appreciated that although the above description
regarding FIGS. 44-46 presents phase shift of 90.degree. for the
indicated purpose, the principles of the invention may be used to
introduce other phase shifts to achieve a similar coordination between
two optical devices which have different response characteristics, such
as, for example, change in light transmission or polarization as a
function of change in electrical input, or other input, e.g., magnetic
input.
[0259] In FIG. 47 details of optical components of the optical system 714
of the display system 705 are shown. The optical components shown in FIG.
47 are similar to those included in the housing 705h of FIG. 43; however,
in FIG. 47 the housing 705h and support 705m are not shown to facilitate
illustrating the invention and to simplify the drawing.
[0260] The optical components 720 of the optical system 714 include
focusing optics 721 (sometimes referred to simply as "lens" or as
projection optics or as a projector), a beamsplitter 722 and
retro-reflector 723. The display system 705 also may include an image
source 715 (FIG. 43) which provides images or light having
characteristics of an image and, if desired, may be part of the mentioned
projector. An exemplary image source is a liquid crystal display, such as
a small liquid crystal television having a cross-sectional display area
on the order of about one square inch or less. As shown, the image source
715 includes a liquid crystal display 724d which modulates light from the
light source 724i to form images for viewing by the eye 713.
Alternatively, the image source may be separate and simply used to
provide one or more images or light having image characteristics that can
be provided by the viewing system 705, such as that shown in FIG. 1, or a
head mounted display, sometimes referred to as HMD to the eye 713.
Additional optical components of the optical system 714 may include
linear polarizers, circular polarizers, wave plates, focusing elements,
such as lenses or mirrors, prisms, filters, shutters, apertures,
diaphragms, and/or other components that may be used to provide a
particular type of output image for viewing by the eye 713. Examples of
several embodiments using such additional optical components are
described below with respect to other drawing figures.
[0261] The invention is useful with virtually any type of image source or
display source. An example of such a display source is a compact flat
panel display, and especially one utilizing a reflective liquid crystal
display made from a single crystal silicon active matrix array.
[0262] In FIG. 47 the image source 715 displays an image 825, which is
shown in the drawing as an arrow 826. The light 827 leaving the image
source 724 represents an image or has characteristics of an image, and
that light is collected by the focusing optics 721 of the optical system
714 of the display system 705 and travels to the beamsplitter 722. In
FIG. 47 and in a number of the other drawing figures hereof the focusing
optics 721 is represented as a single lens. However, it will be
appreciated that the focusing optics 721 may include one or more other
components, such as lenses, reflectors, filters, polarizers, wave plates,
etc.
[0263] Although the image source(s) 715 is shown in FIG. 47 located
relatively above the beamsplitter 722, the image source may alternatively
be located below the beamsplitter as is shown in FIG. 2.
[0264] At least some of the light 827a incident on the beamsplitter 722 is
reflected by the beamsplitter as light 827b toward the retro-reflector
723. The retro-reflector may be, for example, a screen made of
retro-reflecting material. Exemplary retro-reflectors are well known. One
example is that known as a corner reflector or a sheet having a plurality
of corner reflectors. Another example is a material having plural glass
beads or other refracting and/or reflecting devices on or in a support.
An example of a retro-reflector is a film or sheet material having a
plurality of corner cubes which material is sold by Reflexite Corporation
of New Britain, Conn. Such material is available having about forty-seven
thousand corner reflectors per square inch.
[0265] The light (light rays) 827c, which are shown as broken lines, are
reflected by the retro-reflector 723 such that their path is exactly back
along their direction of incidence on the retro-reflector. In this way
some of the light rays 827c pass through the beamsplitter 722 and are
directed toward a location in space designated 828 in the illustration of
FIG. 47. The eye 713 of a viewer (person) can be placed approximately at
location 828 to see the image, and the pupil and lens, individually and
collectively designated 713a, of the eye, accordingly, are shown at that
point. The lens 713a focuses the light incident thereon as an image on
the retina of the eye 713.
[0266] The projection lens 720 projects light toward the retro-reflector
723 to cause a real image to be formed at the retro-reflector or in front
or behind the retro-reflector. As is defined in Jenkins & White,
Fundamentals Of Optics, McGraw-Hill, 1976, for example, using an
exemplary projection lens, an image is real if it can be visible on a
screen. The rays of light are actually brought to a focus in the plane of
the image. A real image is formed when an object is placed beyond the
focal plane of a lens; the real image is formed at the opposite side of
the lens. If the object is moved closer to the focal plane of the lens,
the image moves farther and is enlarged. In contrast, a virtual image
occurs if an object is between the focal point of a lens and the lens
itself.
[0267] In FIG. 47 the broken lines represent light rays which travel after
reflection by the retro-reflector along the same or substantially the
same path, but in the opposite direction to, respective incident light
rays impinging on the retro-reflector. Thus, the retro-reflector 723 is
part of a conjugate optics path 823a in which light incident thereon is
reflected in the same path and opposite direction as reflected light. The
beamsplitter 722 directs light from the focusing optics 721 into that
conjugate optics path and toward the retro-reflector; and the
beamsplitter also passes light in the conjugate optics path from the
retro-reflector to the output port 16 (FIG. 2) for viewing by the eye
713. The beamsplitter 722 and retro-reflector 723 cooperate as a
conjugate optics system to provide that conjugate optics path.
[0268] Using the described conjugate optics path and system, relatively
minimal amount of the light from the image source 724 and focusing optics
721 is lost and, conversely, relatively maximum amount of light is
directed to the eye 713. Also, there is substantial accuracy of image and
image resolution conveyed to the eye. Furthermore, especially if a
relatively good quality retro-reflector is used so that the precise
location at which the image 830 is in focus will not be critical, e.g.,
it can be behind or in front of the retro-reflector, the tolerance
required for the relative positioning of the components of the optical
system 714 is less severe. This makes the HMD display system 705
relatively robust and reliable.
[0269] In FIG. 47 the viewed image 830 is represented by an enlarged arrow
831. Such arrow 831 is shown in FIG. 47 as a magnified focused image of
the image 825 from the image source 724. The image 830 may be in focus at
or approximately at the retro-reflector 723, and this is especially
desirable for good quality images to be provided the eye 713 when a
relatively low quality retro-reflector is used. A low quality
retro-reflector is one which has relatively low resolution or accuracy of
reflecting light in a conjugate manner in the same path but opposite
direction relative to the incident light. With a low or poor quality
retro-reflector and the image not being focused at the retro-reflector,
it is possible that too much light may be lost from the desired conjugate
optics path back to the eye 713, and this can reduce the quality of the
image seen. However, the image 830 may be in focus at another location or
plane either behind the retro-reflector (relative to the eye) or in front
of the retro-reflector, and this is easier to do while maintaining a good
quality image for viewing when the retro-reflector is a good quality one.
The better the retro-reflector, the more self-conjugating is the optical
system 714 and the less the need to focus with precision at the
retro-reflector.
[0270] Retro-reflector quality may be indicated by the radians of beam
spread of light reflected. For example, a relatively good quality
retro-reflector may have from zero or about zero radians of beam spread
to a few milliradians of beam spread. The quality usually is considered
as decreasing in proportion to increasing beam spread of reflected light.
[0271] In considering the brightness of the image seen by the viewer, the
nature of the beamsplitter 722 plays a role. The light produced by the
image source 724 may be polarized or unpolarized. If the beamsplitter 722
is of a non-polarizing type, then a balanced situation is to have 50% of
the light incident on the beamsplitter 722 be reflected and 50%
transmitted. Thus, of the light 827a incident on the beamsplitter 722,
50% is reflected and sent toward the retro-reflector screen 723 as light
827b. Of the reflected light 827c from the retro-reflector 723, 50% of
the light will be transmitted through the beamsplitter 722 and will
travel to the viewer's eye 713. This configuration of the optical
components 720 of the display system 705 can transfer to the viewer's eye
a maximum of 25% of the light produced by the image source 724. If
desired, the beamsplitter 722 can be modified in ways that are well known
to change the ratio of the reflected light to transmitted light thereby.
Also, the beamsplitter 722 may include an anti-reflection coating so that
all or an increased amount of the image comes from one side of the
beamsplitter and thus to reduce the likelihood of a double image.
[0272] Since the optical system 714 of the display system 705 provides
good resolution of the image and maintains the characteristics thereof,
the image source can be a relatively inexpensive one that does not have
to compensate for substantial loss of image quality that may occur in
prior display systems. Furthermore, since a relatively large amount of
the light provided by the image source 724 is provided to the eye 713 for
viewing, e.g., since the retro-reflector can virtually focus the light
for viewing at the eye, additional brightness compensation for loss of
light, as may be needed in prior display systems, especially portable,
e.g., hand held or head mounted, ordinarily would not be required.
[0273] For exemplary purposes, in FIG. 47 three light rays 840a, 840b,
840c (collectively 840) originating at the tip of the arrow 826
constitute a portion of the light 827. Three light rays schematically
shown at 841a, 841b, 841c (collectively 841) also are examples of light
emanating at the tail of the arrow 826. The light 827 has characteristics
of the image 825 from or provided by or at the image source 715, and
represented by the exemplary light rays 840 and 841, is focused by the
focusing optics 721 onto the retro-reflector 723. The size of the image
830 seen as the arrow 831 on the retro-reflector 723 depends on the focal
length of the focusing optics 721 and the distances between the image
source 724 and the retro-reflector 723 from the focal points 843, 844 of
the focusing optics 721. Thus, magnification can depend on such focal
length. The image source 715 should be located relative to the focusing
optics 721 such that an image can be focused, e.g., in focus as is shown
in FIG. 47, at or approximately at the retro-reflector. For example, the
image source 715 may be beyond the focal point 843 of the focusing optics
721, and the retro-reflector likewise preferably is beyond the focal
point 844 of the focusing optics so that the image can be focused at the
retro-reflector.
[0274] In the illustration of FIG. 47 the image 830 on the retro-reflector
723 is magnified relative to the size of the image at the image source
display 724d; it does not have to be magnified. The image 830 may be the
same size as the image 825 or it may be smaller. Thus, although the image
source display 724d may be relatively small and/or may provide a
relatively small size image 825 at its output, the size of the image 830
viewed by the eye 713 may be different.
[0275] The optical system 714 is operable to place the image plane
effectively at the retina of the viewer's eye 713. This is accomplished
by effectively putting the plane of the eye lens (or pupil) 713a
effectively at the position occupied by the focusing optics 721 relative
to the source of the image provided to the focusing optics. In a sense
the lens 721 is optically superimposed on the lens 713a of the eye 713.
[0276] The invention provides an optical system in which there are
conjugate paths from a lens, such as focusing optics 714, which
corresponds to the "lens means" of an optical sensor, e.g., the eye 713.
Stated in another way, the invention presents visual information or
optical data with a wide field of view by taking the output from a lens
(focusing optics 721) and reflecting the light back along a conjugate
path toward a location corresponding to that of the same lens which was
in the original path, but actually direct that reflected light onto the
eye placed at such corresponding location. This is obtained by using the
conjugate optics arrangement disclosed herein.
[0277] The human eye is most comfortable when viewing an image at a
distance of about twenty inches, approximately at the distance at which
one would place a book, document, etc. to be read. It is desirable that
the final image as seen by the viewer be located at such distance, e.g.,
approximately twenty inches from the pupil 713a of the eye. This can be
accomplished in the manner, if desired, by adding an additional lens 717
(FIG. 43) or other optical system (not shown) between the beamsplitter
722 and the eye 713. Such lens may cause the person to see a virtual
image behind the retro-reflector, as is described in several of the above
patent applications. Although in many viewing devices further spacing
between the eye and the optical component of the optical system nearest
the eye may be desired to obtain desired eye relief, the use of the lens
717 at the indicated distance of about 1/2 to 1 inch from the eye usually
is acceptable and reasonably comfortable because that is the approximate
spacing of ordinary eye glasses to which people ordinarily relatively
easily become accustomed.
[0278] The function of the lens 717 may be obtained by using a negative
lens at the focusing optics 721.
[0279] Referring to FIG. 14 an EDS 201 in the form of an electro-optical
dithering system which includes two line doublers in optical series is
shown used with a display 202, in the illustrated embodiment an LCD
(although other types of displays can be used), as a display system 203.
The display 202 and the EDS 201 may be substituted for the display 724d
and EDS 1 in the display system 705 of FIGS. 42 and 43. The display 202
may include a light source or a separate light source 724i may be used to
illuminate the display 202.
[0280] FIG. 48 presents a number of graphs representing signals in the
control system 729 for the display system 705 or display system 203 to
present an image that is enhanced by optical dithering (optical line
doubling, in fact quadrupling) and that is enhanced by the phase shifting
of the invention as described herein. The respective signals are shown on
a time scale presented on the "x" axis. Vertical sync pulses G from a
conventional video signal used for driving a television, CRT, LCD, etc.,
are presented at periodic intervals, e.g., at a frequency of 60 Hz. (one
pulse each about 16.67 milliseconds (ms)). An odd/even frame signal H
also is presented; this signal is approximately a square wave having high
and low half cycle portions, each half cycle occurring over a period of
about 16.67 ms. The high portion of the frame signal represents an odd or
even frame, and low represents the other frame. A video data delay signal
1 controls delivery of video data; high is on and low is off.
[0281] In the display system 203 there are two surface mode liquid crystal
cells 211v, 211h, hereinafter sometimes abbreviated SMD (for surface mode
device), which serve as respective polarization rotators or optical
switches. It will be evident that other types of switches may be used. As
is known, one type of operation of an SMD results in the SMD having two
states, one in which it provides substantially no optical phase
retardation of light, for example, zero or near zero, and one in which it
provides a relative maximum amount of optical phase retardation, for
example, 90 degrees, 45 degrees, etc., depending on the optical thickness
of the SMD and/or on other properties of the particular SMD. Usually the
minimum and maximum optical phase retardations are produced,
respectively, when a respective relative maximum and minimum voltage is
applied across the liquid crystal cell forming the SMD. Usually, the
minimum voltage is a non-zero rms voltage which preconditions the liquid
SMD crystal cell, sometimes referred to as biasing the SMD, to help
maintain the alignment of the liquid crystal material in the maximum
optical retardation condition. In one example, the preconditioning is
provided by a constantly applied voltage in the "low voltage" or maximum
optical retardation state. In another example, the precondition is
provided by the effect of an rms voltage occurring as a result of
periodically driving the liquid crystal cell with a voltage that varies
between an instantaneous value of a maximum level and zero. In this case,
the voltage is reapplied before the liquid crystal cell can relax fully.
Other techniques for driving an SMD also may be possible.
[0282] As is seen in curve J, the voltage waveform applied to the SMD 211v
(FIG. 14) varies at the extremes J' between -15 volts and +15 volts which
provides minimal optical phase retardation (rotation of the plane of
polarization). Portions J'' of the voltage J also are at plus and minus a
small voltage that is slightly above and below, respectively, the zero
voltage level; these portions J'' are the voltage of the SMD when it is
in the maximum optical phase retardation condition (providing maximum
rotation of plane of polarization). Each portion J' and J'' of the
voltage J is the same duration as the respective half cycle of the
odd/even signal H and the same duration as the time period between
vertical sync pulses G. However, the phase of the voltage waveform J is
shifted from the phase of the vertical sync G and odd/even frame signal H
by an amount which is determined in the manner described above with
respect to FIGS. 44-46, for example. That phase shift in the illustrated
example is 13.2 milliseconds, as is evident from the scale at the bottom
of FIG. 48. Waveform signal or voltage K in FIG. 48 is applied to the SMD
211h (FIG. 14). It varies only at one half (1/2) the frequency of the
waveform J.
[0283] As an example of operation of the display system 203, which is not
necessarily coordinated with the sequence of FIGS. 16A-16D, although
producing the result of FIG. 17, incident plane polarized light is
provided to and transmitted through the SMD's 211h and 211v, which are
operated generally according to the waveforms J and K. Therefore, the
polarization of light respectively entering the birefringent crystals,
e.g., calcite or other birefringent material, 210h, 210v will vary
generally in the manner depicted by curves L and M, which is synchronized
and in phase or approximately in phase with the operation of the SMD's
211h, 211 v. As light transmits through the respective birefringent
crystals 210h, 210v, the location of the image from respective pixels of
the display 202 will vary generally along the lines of the curves N and
O. The description herein refers to direction, e.g., horizontal and
vertical; it will be appreciated that such reference only is exemplary,
and where vertical shifting or orientation is referred to, horizontal
could be substituted, and vice versa.
[0284] The phase shifting for coordination of optical switching with an
optical display, for example, as described above, also may be used in a
display system that provides multicolor output with good contrast even
though brightness or intensity of the output light is varied, for
example, of the type disclosed in above-referenced patent application
Ser. No. 08/187,163. Using such phase shifting in coordination with the
liquid crystal display system of such patent application and/or with the
dithering of others of the patent applications referenced above to
provide a multicolor output can increase the resolution, sharpness and
crispness of the viewed image, for example.
[0285] Referring to FIG. 49, a light transmissive display system according
to an embodiment of the invention is illustrated at 901. The display
system 901 includes a light source 902, liquid crystal display 903, such
as that shown at 724d in FIG. 43, optics 904, such as that shown at 14 in
FIG. 43, for projection or viewing of the images created by the liquid
crystal display, a computer control 905, such as the control 729 in FIG.
43, and an image signal source 906, which may be part of the control 905
or a separate source of video signals or other signals as may be
appropriate. A photodetector 907 also may be included in the system 901.
[0286] The light source 902 may be one or more light emitting diodes,
incandescent light source, fluorescent light source, light received via
fiber optics or other means, a metal halide lamp, etc.
[0287] The liquid crystal display 903 may be a twisted nematic liquid
crystal cell, a variable birefringence liquid crystal cell, a supertwist
liquid crystal cell, or some other type or liquid crystal cell able to
modulate light. The liquid crystal display 903 may include polarizers,
wave plates, such as quarter wave plates or other wave plates, means for
compensating for residual birefringence or for problems encountered
during off axis viewing, etc. Other types of display devices which
modulate light as a function of some type of controlled input can be used
in place of the liquid crystal cell 903. Exemplary liquid crystal cells
and display devices which may be used for the liquid crystal cell 903 are
disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,385,806, 4,436,376, 4,540,243, Re. 32,521,
and 4,582,396, which disclose surface mode and pi-cell liquid crystal
devices, and in concurrently filed, commonly owned U.S. patent
application Ser. No. 08/187,050, entitled "Folded Variable Birefringence
Liquid Crystal Apparatus."
[0288] The optics 904 may be one or more lenses separate from and/or
included as part of the liquid crystal display for the purpose of
providing an output image for viewing or for projection. If for viewing,
such optics 904 may be one or more lenses which focus an image for close,
e.g., as in a head mounted display of the heads up display type, virtual
reality type or multimedia type, or far viewing, e.g., as in a slide
viewer or a television. If for projection, such optics 904 may include
projection optics which project an image formed by the display 903 onto a
screen for transmissive viewing or reflective viewing.
[0289] The image signal source 906 may be a source of computer graphics
signals, NTSC type television (video) signals, or other signals intended
to produce an image on the display 903. Such signals are decoded in
conventional manner by the computer control 905, for example, as is the
case in many display systems, and in response to such decoding or
deciphering, the computer control 905 (or some other appropriate control,
circuit, etc.) operates the display 903 to produce desired images. If
desired, the computer control 905 can operate the display 903 in
sequential manner to produce multiple images in sequence while the
display is being illuminated by only a single light source or color of
light, e.g., a monochromatic type of operation. Exemplary operation of
this type is summarized in the above '396 patent. Other exemplary types
of operation of the computer control 905 include those employed in
conventional liquid crystal display televisions of the hand-held or
larger type and/or liquid crystal type computer monitors. Alternatively,
the computer control can operate the display 903 in a field sequential or
frame sequential manner whereby a particular image is formed in several
parts; while one part is formed, the display is illuminated by light of
one color; while another part is formed, the display is illuminated by
light of a different color; and so on. Using this field sequential type
operation, multicolor images can be produced by the display system
apparatus 901.
[0290] In a typical input signal to a television or liquid crystal
television, there is information indicating brightness of the light to be
transmitted (or reflected) at a particular pixel. The computer control
905 is operative to compute the brightness information of a particular
image or scene and in response to such computation to control the
intensity or brightness of the light source 902. While intensity or
brightness of the light source is controlled in this manner, the computer
control 905 operates the liquid crystal display 903 to modulate light
without having to reduce the number of pixels used to transmit light.
Therefore, the full number or a relatively large number of pixels can be
used to form the image or scene even if the brightness of the scene as
controlled by the controlled light source is relatively dark.
[0291] Information coming through from the image signal source 906 may
indicate various levels of illumination. There usually is a blanking
pulse and a data line pulse. The computer control 905 can take the
integral of the data line electrically or an integral of the whole set of
data (from all of the data lines of the scene) or all of the pixels while
electrically skipping the blanking. Based on that integral, the
brightness of the light incident on the display 903 is controlled by the
computer control 905. It will be appreciated that a person having
ordinary skill in the art would be able to prepare an appropriate
computer program to provide the integral functions and to use the results
of such integration to provide brightness control for the light source
902.
[0292] From the foregoing, then, it will be appreciated that the apparatus
901, including the computer control 905, is operative to control or to
adjust the brightness of a scene without degrading the contrast ratio.
Thus, the same contrast ratio can be maintained while brightness of a
scene or image is adjusted. For example, the same contrast ratio or
substantially the same contrast ratio can be maintained by the apparatus
901, whether depicting a scene of a bright sunlit environment or of the
inside of a dark cave. Therefore, the scene will have the appearance of
illumination under natural illumination conditions.
[0293] The features of the invention described below can be used in
virtually any passive display system.
[0294] Power requirements of the apparatus 901 can be reduced over prior
display systems because the intensity of light produced by the source 902
is controlled to create dark images. In prior systems, though, the
intensity of the light produced by the source was maintained
substantially constant while the amount of light permitted to be
transmitted through the passive display would be reduced to create a dark
scene image.
[0295] In addition to controlling intensity of the light source 902 as a
function of brightness of a scene, the computer control 905 also may be
responsive to measurement or detection of the ambient environment in
which the apparatus 901 is located. The brightness of such ambient
environment may be detected by the p
hotodetector 907. The p
hotodetector
907 may be place in a room or elsewhere where the image created by the
display 903 is to be viewed; and the brightness of the source 902 can be
adjusted appropriately. For example, if the room is dark, it usually is
desirable to reduce brightness of the source; and if the room is bright
or the apparatus is being used in sunlight, the brightness of the source
may be increased.
[0296] Turning to FIG. 50, a light reflective display system according to
the invention is illustrated at 901'. The display system 901' includes a
light source 902', liquid crystal display 903', optics 904' for
projection or viewing of the images created by the liquid crystal display
903', a computer control 905', and an image signal source 906. A
p
hotodetector 907 also may be included in the system 901. The various
parts of the display 903' and optics 904' may be the same or similar to
those disclosed in the U.S. patent applications referred to above. The
light source 902' and display 903' may be of the type disclosed in
concurrently filed, commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No.
08/187,262, entitled "Illumination System For A Display."
[0297] For example, the light source 902' may include a source of
circularly polarized light 902a' and a cholesteric liquid crystal
reflector 908. The liquid crystal display 903' may be a reflective
variable birefringence liquid crystal display device.
Full Color Frame Sequential Illumination System and Display.
[0298] Turning to FIG. 51 a full color display subsystem 919 including
illumination system 920 is shown. However, in the display subsystem 919
the illumination system 920 includes several sources of light, each
having a different wavelength. For example, three separate light sources
902r, 902g, 902b provide red, green and blue wavelength light,
respectively, or light that is in respective wavelength bands or ranges
that include red, green and blue, respectively. The light sources may be
respective light emitting diodes or they may be other sources of red,
green and blue light or other respective wavelengths of light, as may be
desired for use in the display subsystem 919. The cholesteric liquid
crystal reflector 908 is able to reflect green light; the reflector 908a
is able to reflect red light; the reflector 908b is able to reflect blue
light. Such reflection occurs when the circular polarization
characteristic of the light is the same direction as the twist direction
of the cholesteric liquid crystal material in the respective reflector.
The reflectors 908, 908a, 908b are transparent to the other polarizations
of incident light and to the other wavelengths of incident light.
[0299] The illumination system 920 is intended sequentially to illuminate
the display 903', which may include a wave plate, such as a quarter wave
plate, (or respective portions of the display) with respective
wavelengths of light. For example, for a period of time the display 903'
(or portion thereof) is illuminated with red light; subsequently
illumination is by either green or blue light; and still subsequently
illumination is by the other of green or blue light. Such sequential
illumination may be carried out sufficiently rapidly so that respective
red, green and blue images created by the display 903' when illuminated
by the respective colors of light are output from the display subsystem
961 and are integrated by the human eye. As a result, the human eye
effectively sees a multicolor image. Other examples of frame sequential
switching to provide multicolor and/or full color outputs are known in
the art. Various advantages inure to a frame sequential multicolor
display, including the ability to provide high resolution with
approximately one-third the number of picture elements required for a
full color r, g, b display system in which respective pixels are red,
green or blue.
[0300] The sequential delivering of red, green and blue light to the
display 903' is coordinated by the control system 905 with the driving of
the display 903'. Therefore, when a red image or a portion of a red image
is to be produced by the display 903', it is done when red light is
incident on the display 903'; and the similar type of operation occurs
with respect to green and blue images.
[0301] If the respective light sources 902r, 902g, 902b are light emitting
diodes, they may be sequentially operated or energized to provide light
in coordination with the operation of the display 903' under direct
control and/or energization by the control system 905. Alternatively, the
control system 905 may be coordinated with whatever other means are used
to provide the respective red, green and blue color lights of the light
source.
[0302] Another example of frame sequential or field sequential operation
of a displays subsystem like that shown at 961 herein is described in the
above-referenced patent applications. Another example of field sequential
operation is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,582,396, which is mentioned
above and incorporated by reference.
[0303] Referring to FIG. 52, a head mounted display 960 includes a pair of
display systems 961, 962 and a control system 705 for creating images
intended to be viewed by the eyes 964, 965 of a person. The display
systems 961, 962 may be positioned in relatively close proximity, for
example, at approximately one inch distance, to the respective eyes 964,
965. A mounting mechanism, such as temple pieces 966, 967 and a nose
bridge 968 may be provided to mount the display 960 on the head of the
person.
[0304] The control system 905 in conjunction with the display systems 961,
962 are intended to create images for viewing by the eyes. Those images
may be monochromatic. The images may be multicolor. The images may be
two-dimensional or they may provide a three dimensional, stereoscopic
effect. Stereoscopic effect viewing is obtained when the control system
905 operates the display systems 961, 962 to provide, respectively, right
eye and left eye images that are sufficiently distinct to provide depth
perception. Right eye, left eye imaging and depth perception are
techniques used in some stereoscopic imaging and viewing systems which
are commercially available.
[0305] The display systems 961, 962 may be identical. The control system
905 provides control and/or power input to the display systems 961, 962
to create images for display to the eyes 964, 965. The display 960 may be
a head mounted display, such as a heads-up display, a virtual reality
display, or a multimedia display. The control system 905 may be generally
a control system of the type used in known head mounted displays to
create such images. Such a control system may provide for control of
color, light intensity, image generating, gamma, etc. The display systems
961, 962 may include focusing optics so as to focus the image created by
the display systems for comfortable viewing, for example from a few
inches up to a few feet in front of the eyes, say, from about 20 inches
to about several feet in front of the eyes.
[0306] It will be appreciated that the features of the liquid crystal cell
903' may be used in the display 960 of the head mounted type. Also,
features of the invention may also be employed in other types of display
systems. One example is a display system that uses only a single display
system of the type described herein. Such display system may be located
in proximity to an eye for direct viewing. Alternatively, such display
system may be used as part of a projection type display in which light
from the display system is projected onto a surface where the image is
formed for viewing. Various lenses and/other optical components may be
used to direct from the display system light to create an appropriate
image at a desired location.
[0307] Turning to FIGS. 53-58, operation of the apparatus is described. In
FIG. 53 a plan view of a dot matrix liquid crystal display is shown. The
shade of grey measured at several pixels is indicated. According to the
bottom graph in FIG. 53, the actual shade is shown; according to the dot
matrix image at the side and top of FIG. 53, the actual shade of the
pixel is shown. Thus, at location 1 on the graph at the bottom of FIG.
53, there is a shade 2. At location 2, there is a shade 1. At location 3
there is a shade 0, and so on. In pixel 1 marked in the top of FIG. 53,
the pixel is a shade gray of 2; and at the adjacent pixel the pixel is a
shade gray of 1, and so on. This is conventional. This would indicate the
signals coming in to the computer control 905.
[0308] In FIG. 54, an example of a bright image scene produced by back
light at a medium (normal) illumination level is illustrated at the top;
the shades of gray are shown at the middle left; and the lamp light level
is constant at the bottom left. The viewer sees a bright/low contrast
image of a person as seen at the top right of the drawing. A side view of
the display representing respective pixels and the gray levels thereof is
shown at the bottom right of the figure.
[0309] FIG. 55 is similar to FIG. 54 again with average constant lamp
light level. The average light level is produced; the average brightness
output from the display is to be produced; and the viewer sees an average
brightness high contrast image because all conditions are optimized.
[0310] FIG. 56 is similar to FIG. 54 again with average constant lamp
light level and a dark transmission provided by the liquid crystal cell;
the viewer sees a dim low contrast image.
[0311] FIGS. 54-56 represent operation of a standard display apparatus.
FIGS. 57 and 58 represent applying the principles of the present
invention to develop high contrast images. In FIG. 57 it is seen that
there is the intent to produce a wide range of gray levels; and this is
possible by using a high intensity lamp level; the result is a bright
high contrast image. In FIG. 58 it is intended that the viewer see a dim
image; the same range of grey shades are provided as is depicted in the
middle left graph of the drawing; but the lamp level is low. Therefore,
there is a good contrast ratio provide to the viewer; from 0 to about 7
at the brightness level shown in the graph at the upper left of the
drawing.
TABLE-US-00002
CHART I
CALC3
SHIFT
POL POL 1/4X DOUBLES
VOLT DIR CALC1 VOLT DIR CALC2 POL DIR HORIZ
FRAME FIELD SMD1 OUT1 SHIFT SMD2 OUT2 SHIFT OUT-2 PIXEL
1 1 Lo H None Lo V None H, V X 2
1 2 Hi V Vert Hi V Non H, V X 2
Down
2 1 Lo H None Hi H Horiz H, V X 2
Right
2 2 Hi V Vert Lo H Horiz H, V X 2
Down Right
* * * * *