Encoded energy waveguide for holographic super-resolution

文档序号:104723 发布日期:2021-10-15 浏览:35次 中文

阅读说明:本技术 用于全息超分辨率的编码能量波导 (Encoded energy waveguide for holographic super-resolution ) 是由 J·S·卡拉夫 B·E·比弗森 于 2017-07-17 设计创作,主要内容包括:所公开的实施例包含用于全息超分辨率的编码能量波导和一种能量装置,所述能量装置具有被配置为沿着通过所述装置的多个能量传播路径引导能量的波导元件阵列,以及可操作以限制沿所述多个路径的能量传播的能量编码元件。能量不受抑制的传播路径可以延伸通过能量位置的第一和第二区域,所述第一和第二区域重叠且偏移,且所述能量编码元件可以限制能量通过所述第一和第二区域中的每个能量位置传播到一条不受抑制的能量传播路径。在一实施例中,所述能量编码元件可以限制沿着不受抑制的传播路径在第一时刻通过所述第一区域以及在第二时刻通过所述第二区域的传播。包括能量装置子系统和能量组合器的能量系统可以被配置为叠加来自所述能量位置的能量。(Disclosed embodiments include an encoded energy waveguide for holographic super-resolution and an energy apparatus having an array of waveguide elements configured to guide energy along a plurality of energy propagation paths through the apparatus, and energy encoding elements operable to limit energy propagation along the plurality of paths. The energy-unsuppressed propagation paths may extend through first and second regions of energy locations that overlap and are offset, and the energy encoding element may limit energy propagation through each of the first and second regions to one of the unsuppressed energy propagation paths. In an embodiment, the energy encoding element may restrict propagation through the first region at a first time and through the second region at a second time along an uninhibited propagation path. An energy system including an energy device subsystem and an energy combiner may be configured to superimpose energy from the energy locations.)

1. An energy device, comprising:

an array of waveguide elements, wherein the array of waveguide elements comprises a first side and a second side, the array of waveguide elements configured to guide energy therethrough along a plurality of energy propagation paths extending through a plurality of energy locations on the first side of the array; and

an energy encoding element operable to limit energy propagation along the plurality of energy propagation paths;

wherein uninhibited energy propagation paths through first and second waveguide elements of said array of waveguide elements define first and second regions of energy locations, said first and second regions overlapping and being offset; and further wherein said energy encoding element substantially limits energy propagation through each energy location in said first and second regions to an uninhibited energy propagation path;

wherein the uninhibited energy propagation paths through the first and second waveguide elements form at least a portion of a volumetric energy field defined by the 4D plenoptic function.

2. The energy device of claim 1, wherein energy passing through the plurality of energy locations is encoded in two different energy states; and

wherein the energy encoding element comprises an energy element comprising a plurality of first regions and a plurality of second regions, each first region being configured to allow substantially uninhibited passage of energy therethrough in a first energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in a second energy state, and each second region being configured to allow substantially uninhibited passage of energy therethrough in the second energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in the first energy state.

3. The energy device of claim 2, wherein the different energy states comprise first and second energy encoding states and the energy encoding elements comprise energy polarizing elements.

4. The energy device of claim 3, wherein the energy encoding element comprises a polarizing element selected from the group consisting of:

a) a linear polarizer;

b) a circular polarizer;

c) a quarter, half or full wave plate; and

d) an energy polarization modulation device.

5. The energy device of claim 3, wherein the first plurality of regions of the energy element each comprise an energy encoding element having a first optical axis and the second plurality of regions of the energy element each comprise an energy encoding element having a second optical axis.

6. The energy device of claim 3, wherein the energy locations in the first and second regions are interlaced or woven by energy encoding states.

7. The energy device of claim 3, wherein the energy locations in the first and second regions are grouped and interleaved or woven by energy coding states.

8. The energy device of claim 2, wherein the plurality of first regions and the plurality of second regions of the energy encoding element cooperate to define an aperture for each waveguide element.

9. The energy device of claim 2, wherein the plurality of first regions and the plurality of second regions of the energy encoding element cooperate to define a plurality of apertures for each waveguide element.

10. The energy device of claim 2, further comprising an energy combining element configured to relay energy between a plurality of energy devices and an energy location surface formed on the energy combining element, wherein the plurality of energy locations are located on the energy location surface of the energy combining element, and further wherein energy propagating through different energy devices is relayed through staggered or woven energy locations on the energy location surface.

Technical Field

The present disclosure relates to energy guiding devices, and in particular to energy waveguides configured to guide energy from coded apertures from shared energy positions according to a 4D plenoptic function.

Background

The dream of an interactive virtual world in the "holographic deck (holodeck)" room, popularized by "Star Trek" of Gene Roddenberry and originally conceived by the writer Alexander moskowski in the beginning of the 20 th century, has been a source of inspiration for science fiction and technological innovation for nearly a century. However, this experience is not convincing to be implemented beyond literature, media, and collective imagination of children and adults.

Disclosure of Invention

In an embodiment, an energy device may include an array of waveguide elements, where the array of waveguide elements may include a first side and a second side, and may be configured to direct energy therethrough along a plurality of energy propagation paths extending through a plurality of energy locations on the first side of the array. The energy device may further comprise an energy encoding element operable to limit energy propagation along the plurality of energy propagation paths.

In an embodiment, the uninhibited energy propagation path through the first and second waveguide elements of the array of waveguide elements may define first and second regions of energy locations that overlap and are offset. The energy encoding element may substantially limit energy propagation to an uninhibited energy propagation path through each energy location in the first and second regions. The uninhibited energy propagation path through the first and second waveguide elements may form at least a portion of a volumetric energy field defined by the 4D plenoptic function.

In an embodiment, energy passing through the plurality of energy locations may be encoded in two different energy states, and the energy encoding element may comprise a plurality of first regions and a plurality of second regions, each first region being configured to allow substantially uninhibited passage of energy therethrough in a first energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in a second energy state, and each second region being configured to allow substantially uninhibited passage of energy therethrough in the second energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in the first energy state.

In an embodiment, at a first time instant, the energy encoding element may substantially suppress energy propagation paths through energy locations in the first region, and the energy encoding element may allow substantially uninhibited energy propagation paths through energy locations in the second region, and at a second time instant, the energy encoding element may substantially suppress energy propagation paths through energy locations in the second region, and the energy encoding element may allow substantially uninhibited energy propagation paths through energy locations in the first region.

In an embodiment, an energy system may include: an energy device subsystem including a first energy device having a first plurality of energy locations, and a second energy device having a second plurality of energy locations; and an energy combining element configured to relay energy between the energy device subsystem and an energy location surface formed on the energy combining element, wherein the plurality of energy locations may be located on the energy location surface of the energy combining element.

In an embodiment, the first and second energy devices may be superimposed in a relative orientation such that superimposing the arrangement of the first plurality of energy locations and the arrangement of the second plurality of energy locations results in a third plurality of energy locations at the energy location surface, the number of third plurality of energy locations being greater than the sum of the first and second plurality combined for each non-bounding region, the resulting energy location size being different from either of the first or second energy locations.

Drawings

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram showing design parameters of an energy-directing system;

FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram showing an energy system having an active device region with a mechanical envelope;

FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram illustrating an energy repeater system;

FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of the energy relay elements attached together and secured to the base structure;

fig. 5A is a schematic diagram showing an example of relaying an image through a multi-core optical fiber;

FIG. 5B is a schematic diagram showing an example of a relayed image through an optical relay that exhibits characteristics of the Transverse Anderson Localization (Transverse Anderson Localization) principle;

FIG. 6 is a schematic diagram illustrating rays propagating from an energy surface to a viewer;

FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment having a field of view indicated by an energy waveguide element and a plurality of energy positions;

FIG. 8 illustrates an embodiment exhibiting challenging characteristics of a system having an energy waveguide element with an effective focal length designed to achieve a 120 degree field of view;

fig. 9 is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy combining element configured to relay energy between an energy device and an energy location surface formed on the energy combining element;

fig. 10 shows an embodiment of the energy device;

fig. 11 shows an embodiment of the energy device;

12A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

FIGS. 13A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

14A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

15A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

16A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

17A-B are illustrations of embodiments of an energy guiding device at first and second times;

FIG. 18 is a top view of an exemplary active energy encoding element;

FIG. 19A is a side view of an energy combiner system;

fig. 19B shows a portion of an energy combiner surface in a top view;

fig. 19C shows a top view of an alternative embodiment of the energy device; and

fig. 20 illustrates an additional embodiment showing how the same effective pixel density and pixel aspect ratio variation can be achieved by utilizing a anamorphic energy relay element.

Detailed Description

Embodiments of Holodeck (collectively, "Holodeck design parameters") provide sufficient energy stimulation to fool human sensory receptors into believing that energy pulses received in virtual, social, and interactive environments are real, providing: 1) binocular parallax without the need for external accessories, head-worn glasses, or other peripherals; 2) accurate motion parallax, occlusion, and opacity across the entire viewing volume simultaneously for any number of viewers; 3) a visual focus achieved by synchronous convergence, accommodation and pupil constriction of the eye for all perceived light; 4) energy waves are propagated with a density and resolution sufficient to exceed the human sensory "resolution" of vision, hearing, touch, taste, smell, and/or balance.

Based on conventional techniques to date, we are several decades or even centuries away from techniques that can provide all of the fields of perception in a convincing way as suggested by the Holodeck design parameters, including the visual, auditory, somatosensory, gustatory, olfactory, and vestibular systems.

In the present disclosure, the terms optical field and hologram may be used interchangeably to define energy propagation for stimulating any sensory receptor response. While the initial disclosure may refer to examples of electromagnetic and mechanical energy propagation through energy surfaces for holographic images and volumetric haptics, all forms of sensory receptors are contemplated in the present disclosure. Furthermore, the principles disclosed herein for propagating energy along a propagation path may be applicable to both energy emission and energy capture.

Many of the techniques that exist today are often unfortunately confused with holograms, including raster printing, peper's Ghost, glasses-free stereoscopic displays, horizontal parallax displays, head-mounted VR and AR displays (HMDs), and other illusions that are broadly "spoof" (fauxlography). These techniques may exhibit some of the desirable characteristics of a true holographic display, however, lack the ability to stimulate the human visual sensory response in any manner sufficient to address at least two of the four identified Holodeck design parameters.

Conventional techniques have not successfully achieved these challenges to produce a seamless energy surface sufficient for holographic energy propagation. There are various approaches to achieve volume and direction multiplexed light field displays, including parallax barriers, hogels, voxels, diffractive optics, multi-view projection, holographic diffusers, rotating mirrors, multi-layer displays, time sequential displays, head mounted displays, etc., but traditional approaches may involve compromises to image quality, resolution, angular sampling density, size, cost, security, frame rate, etc., ultimately leading to unfeasible techniques.

To achieve the Holodeck design parameters of the visual, auditory, and somatosensory systems, the human acuity of the respective systems was studied and understood to propagate energy waves to adequately deceive human sensory receptors. The vision system can resolve to about 1 arc minute, the auditory system can differentiate placement as small as 3 degrees, and the somatosensory system on the hand can recognize points 2-12mm apart. While various and contradictory methods exist to measure these acuity, these values are sufficient to understand the systems and methods of stimulus energy propagation perception.

Among the mentioned sensory receptors, the human visual system is by far the most sensitive, since even a single photon can cause a sensation. For this reason, much of the present description will focus on the visual energy wave propagation, and the very low resolution energy systems coupled within the disclosed energy waveguide surfaces can converge appropriate signals to cause holographic perceptual perception. Unless otherwise stated, all disclosures apply to all energy and sensory domains.

When calculating effective design parameters for energy propagation for a vision system given a viewing volume and viewing distance, a desired energy surface can be designed to contain many gigapixels of effective energy location density. For wide viewing volumes or near field viewing, the design parameters for a desired energy surface may include an effective energy location density of hundreds of gigapixels or more. In contrast, depending on the input environmental variables, the required energy source can be designed to have an energy position density of 1 to 250 effective megapixels for volumetric haptic ultrasonic propagation, or an array of 36 to 3,600 effective energy positions for acoustic propagation of holographic sound. It is important to note that with the disclosed bi-directional energy surface architecture, all components can be configured to form an appropriate structure for any energy domain to achieve holographic propagation.

However, the major challenge in supporting Holodeck today relates to the available visual technology and electromagnetic device limitations. Acoustic and ultrasonic devices are less challenging, but should not underestimate complexity, in view of the magnitude difference in the required density based on the sensory acuity in the respective receptive field. While there are holographic latexes with resolutions in excess of the required density to encode the interference pattern in the static image, prior art display devices are limited by resolution, data throughput, and manufacturing feasibility. To date, no single display device has been able to meaningfully generate a light field of near holographic resolution with visual acuity.

The production of a single silicon-based device capable of meeting the required resolution of a convincing light field display may be impractical and may involve extremely complex manufacturing processes beyond the current manufacturing capabilities. The limitations of splicing multiple existing display devices together involve seams and gaps created by the physical size of the packaging, electronics, housing, optics, and many other challenges, which inevitably result in a technology that is not feasible from an imaging, cost, and/or size standpoint.

Embodiments disclosed herein may provide for building a real-world path for Holodeck.

Example embodiments will now be described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof, and which show example embodiments which may be practiced. As used in the disclosure and the appended claims, the terms "embodiment," "example embodiment," and "exemplary embodiment" do not necessarily refer to a single embodiment (although they may refer to a single embodiment), and the various example embodiments may be readily combined and interchanged without departing from the scope or spirit of the example embodiments. Furthermore, the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing example embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting. In this regard, as used herein, the term "in …" may include "in. Furthermore, as used herein, the term "by" may also mean "in accordance" depending on the context. Further, as used herein, the term "if" may also mean "at … …" or "after … …", depending on the context. Moreover, as used herein, the word "and/or" may refer to and encompass any and all possible combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.

Holographic system considerations:

overview of light field energy propagation resolution

The light field and holographic display are the result of multiple projections, where the energy surface locations provide angular, color, and intensity information that propagates within the viewing volume. The disclosed energy surface provides the opportunity for additional information to coexist and propagate through the same surface to elicit other sensory system responses. Unlike stereoscopic displays, when the viewer moves around the viewing volume, the viewing position of the converging energy propagation paths in space does not change, and any number of viewers can see the propagating object in real world space at the same time as if it were indeed there. In some embodiments, the propagation of energy may be in the same energy propagation path but in opposite directions. For example, in some embodiments of the present disclosure, both energy emission and energy capture along the energy propagation path are possible.

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram showing variables associated with stimulating sensory receptor response. These variables may include the surface diagonal 101, the surface width 102, the surface height 103, the determined target-seating distance 118, the target-seating field of view 104 from the center of the display, the number of intermediate samples 105, shown herein as samples between the eyes, the average adult interocular spacing 106, the average resolution 107 in arc of the human eye, the horizontal field of view 108 formed between the target viewer position and the surface width, the vertical field of view 109 formed between the target viewer position and the surface height, the resulting horizontal waveguide element resolution or total number of elements 110 across the surface, the resulting vertical waveguide element resolution or total number of elements 111 across the surface, the sample distance 112 based on the interocular spacing between the eyes and the number of intermediate samples for angular projection between the eyes. The angular sampling may be based on the sample distance and target seating distance 113, a total resolution level (Horizontal)114 of each waveguide element derived from the desired angular sampling, and a total resolution Vertical (Vertical)115 of each waveguide element derived from the desired angular sampling. The device level is a count 116 of the determined number of discrete energy sources required, and the device vertical is a count 117 of the determined number of discrete energy sources required.

The method of understanding the minimum resolution required may be based on the following criteria to ensure adequate stimulation of the visual (or other) sensory receptor response: surface size (e.g., 84 "diagonal), surface aspect ratio (e.g., 16:9), seating distance (e.g., from display 128"), field of view of seating (e.g., 120 degrees or +/-60 degrees around the center of the display), desired intermediate samples at a certain distance (e.g., one additional propagation path between the eyes), average interocular spacing for adults (about 65mm), and average resolution for the human eye (about 1 arc minute). These example values should be treated as placeholders depending on the specific application design parameters.

Furthermore, each value attributed to the visual perception receptors may be replaced with other systems to determine the desired propagation path parameters. For other energy propagation embodiments, the angular sensitivity of the auditory system can be considered as low as three degrees, and the spatial resolution of the hand of the somatosensory system as small as 2-12 mm.

While various and contradictory methods exist to measure these sensory acuity, these values are sufficient to understand the systems and methods that stimulate the perception of virtual energy propagation. There are many ways to consider design resolution, and the methods presented below combine practical product considerations with the biological resolution limitations of sensory systems. As will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art, the following summary is a simplification of any such system design and should be considered for exemplary purposes only.

With the resolution limitations of the sensory system understood, the total energy waveguide element density can be calculated such that the receiving sensory system cannot distinguish a single energy waveguide element from neighboring elements, given:

the above calculation yields a field of view of about 32x18 °, resulting in the need for about 1920x1080 (rounded to the nearest format) energy waveguide elements. The variables may also be constrained such that the field of view is consistent for both (u, v) to provide more regular spatial sampling of energy locations (e.g., pixel aspect ratio). Angular sampling of the system assumes a defined target viewing volume position and an additional propagation energy path between two points at an optimized distance, given:

in this case, the sample distance is calculated using the inter-eye distance, but any metric may be used to consider an appropriate number of samples as a given distance. In view of the above variables, it may be desirable to have about one ray per 0.57 °, and the total system resolution for each independent sensory system may be determined, given:

total resolution H ═ N × horizontal element resolution

Total resolution V ═ N × vertical element resolution

In the above case, given the size of the energy surface and the angular resolution considered for the visual acuity system, the resulting energy surface may ideally contain energy resolution locations of about 400 kx 225k pixels, or a holographic propagation density of 90 giga pixels. These variables are provided for exemplary purposes only, and many other sensory and energy metering considerations should be considered to optimize holographic energy propagation. In additional embodiments, an energy resolution position of 1 gigapixel may be required based on input variables. In additional embodiments, based on input variables, an energy resolution location of 1,000 gigapixels may be required.

The current technology is limited:

active area, device electronics, packaging and mechanical envelope

Fig. 2 shows a device 200 having an active region 220 with a particular mechanical form factor. The apparatus 200 may include a driver 230 and electronics 240 for powering and interfacing the active area 220 with the active area 220 having dimensions as indicated by the x and y arrows. This device 200 does not take into account wiring and mechanical structure to drive, power and cool the components, and the mechanical footprint can be further minimized by introducing flex cables into the device 200. The minimum footprint of this device 200 may also be referred to as the mechanical envelope 210, which has dimensions as indicated by the M: x and M: y arrows. This device 200 is for illustration purposes only, and a custom electronic design may further reduce the mechanical envelope overhead, but may not be the exact size of the active area of the device in almost all cases. In an embodiment, this apparatus 200 illustrates the dependency of the electronics as it relates to the active image area 220 for micro-OLEDs, DLP chips or LCD panels, or any other technology with image illumination purpose.

In some embodiments, other projection techniques thereof may also be considered to aggregate multiple images onto a larger, integral display. However, this may come at the expense of greater complexity in throw distance, minimum focus, optical quality, uniform field resolution, chromatic aberration, thermal characteristics, calibration, alignment, additional size or form factor. For most practical applications, hosting tens or hundreds of these projection sources 200 may result in larger designs and lower reliability.

Assuming, for exemplary purposes only, an energy device with an energy location density of 3840 x 2160 sites, the number of individual energy devices (e.g., device 100) required for an energy surface may be determined, given:

in view of the above resolution considerations, about 105 × 105 devices similar to those shown in fig. 2 may be required. It should be noted that many devices are composed of various pixel structures, which may or may not be mapped to a regular grid. Where there are additional sub-pixels or locations within each full pixel, these sub-pixels or locations may be utilized to generate additional resolution or angular density. Additional signal processing may be used to determine how to convert the light field to the correct (u, v) coordinates according to the specified position of the pixel structure, and may be an explicit feature of each device, both known and calibrated. Furthermore, other energy domains may involve different processing of these ratios and device structures, and those skilled in the art will understand the direct intrinsic relationship between each desired frequency domain. This will be shown and discussed in more detail in the disclosure that follows.

The resulting calculations can be used to understand how many of these individual devices may be needed to generate a full resolution energy surface. In this case, about 105 x 105 or about 11,080 devices may be required to achieve the visual acuity threshold. There are challenges and novelty in creating seamless energy surfaces from these available energy locations in order to achieve sufficient perceived holographic propagation.

Overview of seamless energy surface:

configuration and design of energy repeater arrays

In some embodiments, methods are disclosed to address the challenge of creating high energy site density from an array of individual devices without seams due to limitations of the mechanical structure of the devices. In an embodiment, the energy propagating repeater system may allow the effective size of the active device area to be increased to meet or exceed the mechanical size used to configure the repeater array and form a single seamless energy surface.

Fig. 3 illustrates an embodiment of such an energy repeater system 300. As shown, the repeater system 300 may include a device 310 mounted to a mechanical envelope 320, wherein an energy repeater element 330 propagates energy from the device 310. The repeater element 330 may be configured to provide the ability to mitigate any gaps 340 that may arise when multiple mechanical envelopes 320 of a device are placed into an array of multiple devices 310.

For example, if the active area 310 of the device is 20mm by 10mm and the mechanical envelope 32 is 40mm by 20mm, the energy relay elements 330 may be designed with a magnification of 2:1 to produce a tapered shape of about 20mm by 10mm on the reduced end (arrow a) and about 40mm by 20mm on the enlarged end (arrow B), thereby providing the ability to seamlessly align the arrays of these elements 330 together without altering or impacting the mechanical envelope 320 of each device 310. Mechanically, the repeater elements 330 can be glued or fused together to align and polish, ensuring a minimum seam gap 340 between the devices 310. In one such embodiment, a seam gap 340 less than the visual acuity limit of the eye may be achieved.

Fig. 4 shows an example of a base structure 400, the base structure 400 having energy relay elements 410 formed together and securely fixed to an additional mechanical structure 430. The mechanical structure of the seamless energy surface 420 provides the ability to serially couple multiple energy repeater elements 410, 450 to the same base structure by bonding or other mechanical processes to install the repeater elements 410, 450. In some embodiments, each repeater element 410 may be fused, bonded, attached, press-fit, aligned, or otherwise attached together to form the resulting seamless energy surface 420. In some embodiments, the device 480 may be mounted to the rear of the repeater element 410 and aligned either passively or actively to ensure that proper energy positional alignment within the determined tolerances is maintained.

In an embodiment, the seamless energy surface includes one or more energy locations and the one or more energy relay element stacks include first and second sides, and each energy relay element stack is arranged to form a single seamless display surface that directs energy along a propagation path extending between the one or more energy locations and the seamless display surface, and wherein a spacing between edges of any two adjacent second sides of the terminal energy relay elements is less than a minimum perceivable profile defined by a visual acuity of a human eye having better than 20/40 vision at distances greater than a width of the single seamless display surface.

In an embodiment, each seamless energy surface comprises one or more energy relay elements, each energy relay element having one or more structures forming first and second surfaces having a transverse and longitudinal orientation. The first repeater surface has a different area than the second repeater surface, resulting in positive or negative amplification, and is configured with a well-defined surface profile of both the first and second surfaces, with energy passing through the second repeater surface filling substantially +/-10 degrees with respect to a normal to the surface profile across the second repeater surface. .

In an embodiment, multiple energy domains may be configured within a single energy relay or between multiple energy relays to direct one or more sensory holographic energy propagation paths including visual, acoustic, tactile, or other energy domains.

In an embodiment, the seamless energy surface is configured with an energy repeater comprising two or more first sides for each second side to simultaneously receive and transmit one or more energy domains, thereby providing bidirectional energy propagation throughout the system.

In an embodiment, the energy repeater is provided as a loose coherent element.

Introduction of the component engineering structure:

disclosed developments of transverse anderson positioned energy repeaters

The characteristics of the energy repeater can be significantly optimized according to the principles of the energy repeater elements disclosed herein that result in lateral anderson positioning. Transverse anderson localization is the propagation of a ray transmitted through a transversely disordered but longitudinally uniform material.

This means that the effect of the material producing the anderson localization phenomenon may be less affected by total internal reflection than by randomization between multiple scattering paths, where wave interference may completely restrict propagation in the transverse orientation while the longitudinal orientation continues.

A significant additional benefit is the elimination of the cladding of conventional multicore fiber materials. The cladding functionally eliminates energy scattering between the fibers, but at the same time acts as a barrier to energy rays, thereby reducing the transmission at least by the ratio of core to cladding (e.g., a core to cladding ratio of 70:30 will transmit up to 70% of the received energy) and additionally forms an intense pixilated pattern in the propagating energy.

Fig. 5A shows an end view of an example of one such non-anderson positioned energy repeater 500, where the image is repeated through a multi-core fiber, where pixelation and fiber noise may be exhibited due to the inherent characteristics of the fiber. For conventional multi-mode and multi-core fibers, the relayed image may be pixilated in nature due to the total internal reflection characteristics of the discrete array of cores, where any crosstalk between the cores would impair the modulation transfer function and increase the blur. The resulting image produced with a conventional multi-core fiber tends to have a residual fixed noise fiber pattern similar to that shown in fig. 3.

Fig. 5B shows an example of the same relayed image 550 through an energy relay comprising a material exhibiting transverse anderson localized characteristics, wherein the relayed pattern has a greater density grain structure than the fixed fiber pattern in fig. 5A. In one embodiment, a repeater comprising randomized micro-assembly engineering structures induces lateral anderson localization and has higher resolvable resolution propagation and transmits light more efficiently than commercially available multimode glass fibers.

The lateral anderson positioning material properties have significant advantages in terms of cost and weight, where the cost and weight of similar optical grade glass materials can be 10 to 100 times higher than the cost of the same materials produced within the embodiments, where the disclosed systems and methods include randomized microscopic component engineering structures that show significant opportunities for improved cost and quality compared to other techniques known in the art.

In an embodiment, the repeater elements exhibiting transverse anderson positioning may comprise a plurality of at least two different component engineered structures in each of three orthogonal planes arranged in a three-dimensional grid, and the plurality of structures forming a randomized distribution of material wave propagation properties in transverse planes within the dimensional grid and a channel of similar values of material wave propagation properties in longitudinal planes within the dimensional grid, wherein local energy waves propagating through the energy repeater have a higher transfer efficiency in the longitudinal orientation relative to the transverse orientation.

In an embodiment, multiple energy domains may be configured within a single transverse anderson positioned energy repeater or between multiple transverse anderson positioned energy repeaters to direct one or more sensory holographic energy propagation paths including visual, acoustic, tactile, or other energy domains.

In an embodiment, the seamless energy surface is configured with a transverse anderson positioned energy repeater comprising two or more first sides for each second side to simultaneously receive and transmit one or more energy domains to provide bidirectional energy propagation throughout the system.

In an embodiment, the transverse anderson positioned energy repeater is configured as a loose coherent or flexible energy repeater element.

Considerations for 4D plenoptic function:

selective energy propagation through holographic waveguide array

As discussed above and herein, light field display systems typically include an energy source (e.g., an illumination source) and a seamless energy surface configured with sufficient energy location density as set forth in the discussion above. Multiple repeater elements may be used to relay energy from the energy device to the seamless energy surface. Once the energy is delivered to the seamless energy surface at the desired energy site density, the energy can be propagated according to the 4D plenoptic function by the disclosed energy waveguide system. As will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art, 4D plenoptic functions are well known in the art and are not further detailed herein.

An energy waveguide system selectively propagates energy through a plurality of energy locations along a seamless energy surface representing spatial coordinates of a 4D plenoptic function, the structure of which is configured to change the angular direction of energy waves passing therethrough, representing angular components of the 4D plenoptic function, wherein the propagating energy waves can converge in space according to a plurality of propagation paths guided by the 4D plenoptic function.

Referring now to fig. 6, an example of a light-field energy surface in 4D image space according to a 4D plenoptic function is shown. The figure shows ray trajectories of the energy surface 600 to the viewer 620, describing how the energy rays converge in the space 630 from various locations within the viewing volume. As shown, each waveguide element 610 defines four-dimensional information describing energy propagation 640 through the energy surface 600. The two spatial dimensions (referred to herein as x and y) are the physical plurality of energy positions that can be viewed in image space when projected through the array of energy waveguides, and the angular components θ and θ viewed in virtual space(referred to herein as u and v). In general, and according to the 4D plenoptic function, multiple waveguides (e.g., lenslets) are capable of directing energy positions from the x, y dimensions to unique positions in virtual space along directions defined by the u, v angular components when forming the holographic or light field systems described herein.

However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that significant challenges to light field and holographic display techniques stem from uncontrolled propagation of energy, since the design does not accurately account for any diffraction, scattering, diffusion, angular orientation, alignment, focusing, collimation, curvature, uniformity, element crosstalk, and many other parameters that contribute to reduced effective resolution and inability to accurately converge energy with sufficient fidelity.

In an embodiment, a method for selective energy propagation that addresses challenges associated with holographic displays may include an energy encoding element and substantially filling a waveguide aperture with near collimated energy into an environment defined by a 4D plenoptic function.

In an embodiment, the energy waveguide array may define, for each waveguide element, a plurality of energy propagation paths configured to extend through and substantially fill the effective aperture of the waveguide element in a unique direction defined by the prescribed 4D function to a plurality of energy locations along a seamless energy surface that is inhibited by one or more elements positioned to limit propagation of each energy location to only through a single waveguide element.

In an embodiment, multiple energy domains may be configured within a single energy waveguide or between multiple energy waveguides to guide one or more sensory holographic energy propagations involving visual, acoustic, tactile, or other energy domains.

In an embodiment, the energy waveguide and the seamless energy surface are configured to receive and transmit one or more energy domains to provide bidirectional energy propagation throughout the system.

In an embodiment, the energy waveguide is configured to propagate a non-linear or irregular energy distribution (including non-transmissive void regions) with a waveguide configuration such as digital encoding, diffraction, refraction, reflection, smile, holographic, fresnel, for any seamless energy surface orientation (including walls, tables, floors, ceilings, rooms, or other geometry-based environments). In further embodiments, the energy-guiding elements may be configured to produce various geometries that provide any surface contour and/or desktop viewing, allowing a user to view holographic images from around the energy surface in a 360 degree configuration.

In an embodiment, the energy waveguide array elements may be reflective surfaces, and the arrangement of elements may be hexagonal, square, irregular, semi-regular, curved, non-planar, spherical, cylindrical, regularly tilted, irregularly tilted, spatially varying, and/or multi-layered.

For any component within the seamless energy surface, a waveguide or repeater component may include, but is not limited to, an optical fiber, silicon, glass, polymer, optical repeater, diffractive, holographic, refractive or reflective element, optical panel, energy combiner, beam splitter, prism, polarizing element, spatial light modulator, active pixel, liquid crystal cell, transparent display, or any similar material that exhibits anderson positioning or total internal reflection.

Realizing Holodeck:

polymerization of bi-directional seamless energy surface system to stimulate human sensory receptors within holographic environment

By splicing, fusing, bonding, attaching and/or sewing together multiple seamless energy surfaces into any size, shape, profile or form factor encompassing an entire room, a large-scale environment of a seamless energy surface system may be constructed. Each energy surface system may include an assembly having a base structure, an energy surface, a relay, a waveguide, a device, and electronics collectively configured for bi-directional holographic energy propagation, emission, reflection, or sensing.

In an embodiment, the environments of a tiled seamless energy system are aggregated to form a large seamless planar or curved wall, including installations that include up to all surfaces in a given environment, and are configured in any combination of seamless, discontinuous planar, faceted, curved, cylindrical, spherical, geometric, or irregular geometric shapes.

In an embodiment, the polymerized tiles of planar surface form a system of wall dimensions for theater or venue based holographic entertainment. In one embodiment, a polymeric tile of planar surface covers a room with four to six walls, including a ceiling and a floor, for cave-based holographic installation. In an embodiment, a curved surface of the aggregated tile creates a cylindrical seamless environment for immersive holographic installation. In an embodiment, the polymeric tile of seamless spheres forms a holographic dome for a Holodeck-based immersive experience.

In an embodiment, the polymeric tiles of seamless curved energy waveguides provide mechanical edges following a precise pattern along the boundaries of the energy encoding elements within the energy waveguide structure to bond, align, or fuse adjacent tiled mechanical edges of adjacent waveguide surfaces, thereby creating a modular seamless energy waveguide system.

In another embodiment of the aggregated tiled environment, energy is propagated bi-directionally for multiple simultaneous energy domains. In further embodiments, the energy surface provides the ability to be simultaneously displayed and captured from the same energy surface, wherein the waveguide is designed such that the light field data can be projected through the waveguide by the illumination source and simultaneously received through the same energy surface. In further embodiments, additional depth sensing and active scanning techniques may be utilized to allow interaction between the energy spread and the viewer in the correct world coordinates. In further embodiments, the energy surface and the waveguide are operable to emit, reflect, or converge frequencies to induce haptic sensations or volumetric haptic feedback. In some embodiments, any combination of bidirectional energy propagation and converging surfaces is possible.

In an embodiment, the system comprises an energy waveguide capable of bi-directional emission and sensing energy through an energy surface, wherein one or more energy devices are independently paired with two or more path energy combiners to pair at least two energy devices to the same portion of a seamless energy surface, or one or more energy devices are fixed behind an energy surface, near an additional component fixed to the base structure, or near a location in front of and outside the FOV of a waveguide used for off-axis guidance or reflection projection or sensing, and the resulting energy surface provides bi-directional transmission of energy, allowing the waveguide to converge the energy, a first device to emit energy and a second device to sense energy, and wherein information is processed to perform tasks related to computer vision, including but not limited to interference within 4D all-optical eye and retinal tracking or sensing of propagated energy modes, Depth estimation, proximity, motion tracking, image, color or sound formation, or other energy frequency analysis. In further embodiments, the tracking position actively calculates and modifies the energy position based on interference between the bi-directional capture data and the projection information.

In some embodiments, multiple combinations of three energy devices including an ultrasonic sensor, a visible electromagnetic display, and an ultrasonic transmitting device are configured together such that each of three first relay surfaces of propagating energy are combined into a single second energy relay surface, each of the three first surfaces includes engineered characteristics specific to an energy domain of each device, and the two engineered waveguide elements are respectively configured for ultrasonic and electromagnetic energy to provide the ability to independently guide and converge the energy of each device and are substantially unaffected by other waveguide elements configured for separate energy domains.

In some embodiments, a calibration procedure is disclosed to enable efficient manufacturing to remove system artifacts and generate geometric maps of the resulting energy surface for use with encoding/decoding techniques, as well as application specific integration systems for converting data into calibrated information suitable for energy propagation based on a calibrated profile.

In some embodiments, additional energy waveguides and one or more energy devices in series may be integrated into the system to produce opaque holographic pixels.

In some embodiments, additional waveguide elements including energy encoding elements, beam splitters, prisms, active parallax barriers, or polarization techniques may be integrated to provide spatial and/or angular resolution greater than the waveguide diameter or for other super-resolution purposes.

In some embodiments, the disclosed energy system may also be configured as a wearable two-way device, such as a Virtual Reality (VR) or Augmented Reality (AR). In other embodiments, the energy system may include adjusting optical elements that cause the displayed or received energy to be focused near a determined plane in the viewer's space. In some embodiments, the waveguide array may be incorporated into a holographic head mounted display. In other embodiments, the system may include multiple optical paths to allow the viewer to see the energy system and the real world environment (e.g., a transparent holographic display). In these cases, the system may appear to be near-field, among other methods.

In some embodiments, the data transmission includes an encoding process with a selectable or variable compression ratio that receives an arbitrary data set of information and metadata; analyzing the data set and receiving or assigning material properties, vectors, surface IDs, new pixel data forming a more sparse data set, and wherein the received data may comprise: 2D, stereo, multi-view, metadata, light field, holographic, geometric, vector, or vectorized metadata, and the encoder/decoder may provide the ability to convert data in real-time or offline, including image processing for: 2D; 2D plus depth, metadata, or other vectorized information; stereo, stereo plus depth, metadata, or other vectorized information; a plurality of views; multi-view plus depth, metadata, or other vectorized information; holography; or light field content; with or without depth metadata by a depth estimation algorithm; and the reverse ray tracing method maps the resulting converted data generated by reverse ray tracing from the various 2D, stereo, multi-view, volumetric, light-field, or holographic data to real-world coordinates as appropriate through a characterized 4D plenoptic function. In these embodiments, the desired total data transmission may be many orders of magnitude less transmitted information than the original light field data set.

Energy-suppressing encoded waveguide for super-resolution in holographic systems

Holographic and plenoptic 4D systems will suffer from significant angular artifacts, taking into account the mismatch between the total angular distribution of the propagation path through the waveguide aperture and the viewing volume of the energy guiding system. In an uncontrolled system, when the active waveguide apertures within the array include only the ideal chief ray angle for a given waveguide function, the paths from the energy waveguide elements may propagate to regions outside the array of predetermined energy locations defining the angular distribution of the system, but may in fact not be limited to the field of view, as energy continues to propagate off-axis beyond the ideal chief ray angle for the waveguide elements. Without proper consideration of selective energy propagation of the waveguide array, energy propagation paths from energy locations allocated to adjacent waveguides may compromise energy guiding system performance.

FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment 700 having a field of view 702 indicated by an energy waveguide element 704 and a plurality of energy locations 706 to define an effective angular distribution of the waveguide element 704 and an associated viewing volume 708. A viewer 710 viewing the energy waveguide element 704 along a ray 712 will erroneously view an energy location 714, which may not direct the appropriate energy information to the viewer 710.

To address the wider angular distribution of the propagation path to accommodate the off-axis viewer of fig. 7, reduced effective waveguide elements may be explored. For a main ray angular distribution of 120 degrees, this will result in an effective f/.6 aperture of about. Depending on the design of the energy waveguide elements, any aperture below f/1.4 becomes more and more challenging. Fig. 8 illustrates an embodiment 800 that demonstrates the challenging characteristics of a system with an energy waveguide element 802, the energy waveguide element 802 having an effective focal length 804 designed to achieve a 120 degree field of view 806.

Fig. 8 shows an idealized waveguide energy propagation angular distribution that does not take into account the propagation through the effective aperture of the waveguide element. As disclosed herein, for any energy guiding system design, an energy encoding element for selectively propagating energy through a waveguide array to suppress off-axis energy propagation paths may be required.

In one embodiment, the energy encoding element may be positioned to limit the propagation of energy along a portion of the energy propagation path. Additionally, the energy encoding element may include at least one numerical aperture and may include a baffle structure. In an embodiment, the structure of the energy encoding elements may be configured to thereby limit the angular range of energy propagation.

As a further extension of the energy encoding elements, a system providing spatio-temporal super-resolution is included to increase the effective focal length by spatial, temporal or spatio-temporal energy location overlapping the energy encoding elements while maintaining the same extended field of view by effectively converting the suppression aspects of the elements into energy encoding methods via prescribed encoding between at least a portion of the waveguide aperture and the energy encoding elements. Pairings within the energy-directed system to spatial, temporal, spatiotemporal, or other aspects will be collectively referred to as energy-encoding elements, and the set of energy-encoding elements constitutes an energy-encoding system.

Energy encoding device through energy-preserving combiner and energy-preserving component engineering structure

By including a plurality of polarization maintaining energy combiners or polarization maintaining assembly engineering structures to form a system of energy combiners exhibiting transverse anderson positioning, it is disclosed to provide angular super-resolution, polarization or energy state maintaining energy combiners by using a novel approach to energy relay devices in embodiments of energy encoding elements. With this system, multiple energy positions can be encoded directly or indirectly, and energy encoding states can be maintained through energy relay paths and a single seamless energy surface. In an embodiment, multiple encoded energy paths along the energy combiner are possible. In another embodiment, 4 encoded energy paths are provided. In another embodiment, 8 encoded energy paths are provided.

In an embodiment of the energy encoding repeater device, a two-state polarization system (e.g., horizontal and vertical, or clockwise and counterclockwise) is provided to polarize each energy waveguide element or region of each energy waveguide element and propagate two or more overlapping energy location regions while substantially suppressing propagation of stray paths, wherein each propagation path is suppressed to a single energy waveguide element or portion thereof.

In an embodiment, an energy device may include an energy combining element configured to relay energy between a plurality of energy devices and an energy location surface formed on the energy combining element, wherein the plurality of energy locations are located on the energy location surface of the energy combining element, and further wherein energy propagated through different energy devices is relayed through interleaved energy locations on the energy location surface. In an embodiment, the energy combining element may comprise a plurality of energy structures exhibiting a lateral anderson orientation. In an embodiment, the energy combining element may comprise a plurality of encoded energy holding fibers, or an encoded energy holding assembly engineered structure, forming an energy relay element exhibiting transverse anderson positioning. In an embodiment, the energy at the staggered or braided energy locations may have alternating energy states. In one embodiment, the alternating energy states may be different polarization states. In an embodiment, the energy combiner comprises an energy encoding element on the relay energy surface.

The energy combiner, the multiple energy locations of polarization, the polarization state maintained by the energy location surface, and the polarized energy waveguiding element can all be combined to produce two fully discrete and overlapping energy location regions. In one embodiment, the polarizing film may be applied to the energy waveguide element substrate, directly embedded in the energy waveguide element, placed above, below, or centered on the array of energy waveguide elements, to suit the waveguide element function and the polarization energy encoding system.

Fig. 9 is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy combining element 900, illustrating this approach. The energy combining element 900 is configured to relay energy between the energy devices 902 and 904 and an energy location surface 906 formed on the energy combining element 900. The plurality of energy locations 908 are located on the energy location surface 906 and energy propagating through the energy combining element 900 is relayed through interleaved energy locations 910, 912 on the energy location surface 906 having orthogonal polarization states 914, 916.

In an embodiment, the energy encoding elements may be located on the second side of the array of waveguide elements.

In an embodiment, the energy encoding element may be located on the first side between the plurality of energy locations and the array of waveguide elements.

In an embodiment, active energy encoding elements may be utilized to further extend the ability to view multiple simultaneous energy location regions of a single seamless energy surface.

Passive energy encoding system for super-resolution in holographic systems

In an embodiment, an energy device may include an array of waveguide elements, where the array of waveguide elements may include a first side and a second side, and may be configured to direct energy therethrough along a plurality of energy propagation paths extending through a plurality of energy locations on the first side of the array. The energy device may further comprise an energy encoding element operable to limit energy propagation along the plurality of energy propagation paths.

In an embodiment, the uninhibited energy propagation path through the first and second waveguide elements of the array of waveguide elements may define first and second regions of energy locations that overlap and are offset. The energy encoding element may substantially limit energy propagation to an uninhibited energy propagation path through each energy location in the first and second regions. The uninhibited energy propagation path through the first and second waveguide elements may form at least a portion of a volumetric energy field defined by the 4D plenoptic function.

In an embodiment, energy passing through the plurality of energy locations may be encoded in two different energy states, and the energy encoding element may comprise an energy encoding element comprising a plurality of first regions and a plurality of second regions, each first region being configured to allow energy to pass therethrough substantially uninhibited in a first energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in a second energy state, and each second region being configured to allow energy to pass therethrough substantially uninhibited in the second energy state and substantially inhibit propagation of energy in the first energy state.

In an embodiment, the energy encoding elements may comprise energy polarizing elements. In an embodiment, the different energy states may include first and second polarization states, and the energy encoding element may include an energy polarization filter.

In an embodiment, the energy encoding element may comprise an energy polarizer, such as a linear polarizer; a circular polarizer; or an energy modulation device.

In an embodiment, the first plurality of regions of the energy encoding element may each include an energy polarizing element having a first optical axis, and the second plurality of regions of the energy encoding element may each include an energy polarizing element having a second optical axis.

In an embodiment, the energy locations in the first and second regions may be interlaced or woven by energy encoding states.

In an embodiment, the energy locations in the first and second regions may be grouped and interleaved or woven by energy encoding states.

In an embodiment, the plurality of first regions and the plurality of second regions of the energy encoding element may cooperate to define a region of an aperture for each waveguide element.

Fig. 10 shows an embodiment of the energy device 1000. The energy device 1000 includes an array of waveguide elements 1002 that further includes a first side 1004 and a second side 1006 and is configured to direct energy therethrough along a plurality of energy propagation paths 1008, the plurality of energy propagation paths 1008 extending through a plurality of energy locations 1010 on the first side 1004 of the array 1002. The apparatus 1000 further includes an energy encoding element 1012 operable to limit energy propagation along the plurality of energy propagation paths 1008. Uninhibited propagation paths 1014, 1016 through the first and second waveguide elements 1018, 1020 define first and second regions 1022, 1024 of energy locations, the first and second regions 1022, 1024 overlapping and offset. The energy encoding element 1012 may substantially limit the propagation of energy through each energy location in the first and second regions 1022, 1024 to one of the uninhibited energy propagation paths 1014 or 1016. Uninhibited propagation paths 1014, 1016 through first and second waveguide elements 1018, 1020 may form at least a portion of a volumetric energy field defined by a 4D plenoptic function. In the device 1000, the plurality of energy positions 1010 are passively encoded into either a first passive encoding state 1026 or a second passive encoding state 1028 such that the energy positions in the first and second regions 1022, 1024 are interleaved or woven by energy encoding states. The energy encoding element 1012 includes an encoding including a first region 1030 configured to allow energy to pass therethrough in a first state 1026 and to suppress energy in a second state 1028; and a second region 1032 configured to allow energy to pass therethrough in the second state 1028 and to suppress energy in the first state 1026. The first region 1030 of the energy encoding element 1012 forms an aperture 1034 of the waveguide element 1018, and the second region 1032 of the energy encoding element 1012 forms an aperture 1036 of the waveguide element 1020.

In an embodiment, the plurality of first regions and the plurality of second regions of the energy encoding element may cooperate to define a plurality of apertures for each waveguide element.

Fig. 11 shows an embodiment of an energy device 1100. In the energy device 1100, the first region 1102 and the second region 1104 of the energy encoding element 1106 form a first aperture area 1108 and a second aperture area 1110 of the waveguide element 1112. The third and fourth regions 1114, 1116 of the energy encoding element 1106 form first and second aperture regions 1118, 1120 of the waveguide element 1122.

Active and hybrid energy encoding system for super-resolution in holographic systems

Fig. 10-11 provide techniques for encoding that may not utilize active electronics to implement the energy suppression method. It is advantageous to provide the ability to aggregate multiple super-resolution systems together, given that passive components do not exhibit a mechanical envelope that conflicts with the aggregation of multiple devices. However, given the angular sampling divided by the number of coding states within the system, it is additionally effective to provide half the potential spatial resolution in any such overlapping interleaved or woven configuration. In further embodiments, an active energy encoding system is disclosed that includes temporal encoding elements to further extend the ability to propagate multiple simultaneous energy location regions of a single seamless energy surface with potentially higher spatial resolution.

In an embodiment, the uninhibited energy propagation path through the first and second waveguide elements of the array of waveguide elements may define first and second regions of energy locations that overlap and are offset. At a first instance in time, the energy encoding element may substantially suppress energy propagation paths through energy locations in the first region, and the energy encoding element may allow substantially uninhibited energy propagation paths through energy locations in the second region. At a second instance in time, the energy encoding element may substantially suppress energy propagation paths through energy locations in the second region, and the energy encoding element may allow substantially uninhibited energy propagation paths through energy locations in the first region. Temporally aggregated uninhibited energy propagation paths through the first and second waveguide elements may form at least a portion of a volumetric energy field defined by the 4D plenoptic function.

In an embodiment, the energy encoding element may comprise an active encoding system configured to switch between at least a first state and a second state, wherein the active encoding element is configured to form a first set of apertures when driven to the first state and the active encoding element is configured to form a second set of apertures when driven to the second state. In an embodiment, the first and second sets of apertures may be formed by active encoding elements having binary values for transmitting or absorbing a particular energy. In an embodiment, the active encoding element may comprise a transparent pixel array. In an embodiment, the active encoding element may comprise an active parallax barrier. In an embodiment, the active parallax barrier may comprise louvers.

Fig. 12A is an illustration of an embodiment of an energy-guiding device 1200 at a first time, and fig. 12B is an illustration of the energy-guiding device 1200 at a second time. The energy directing device 1200 includes an active encoding element 1202 that further includes first and second regions 1204, 1206. At a first time, region 1204 is configured to inhibit energy from propagating along energy propagation path 1208 from energy location 1212 through waveguide element 1214, while region 1206 is configured to allow energy to propagate along energy propagation path 1210 from energy location 1212 through waveguide element 1216. At a second time, region 1204 is configured to allow energy to propagate from energy location 1212 through waveguide element 1214 along energy propagation path 1204, while region 1206 is configured to inhibit energy from propagating from energy location 1212 through waveguide element 1216 along energy propagation path 1208. It should be noted that in embodiment 1200, there is only one encoding element, namely active encoding element 1202.

In an embodiment, the one or more active energy encoding elements may be an energy polarization switch, an energy band pass switch, or an energy modulation device.

In an embodiment, the one or more passive energy encoding elements may be an energy polarization filter, an energy band pass filter, or an energy waveguide.

In an embodiment, the one or more active energy encoding elements may encode energy into different energy states, and the one or more passive energy encoding elements may filter energy based on the energy states.

In an embodiment, the one or more active energy encoding elements may temporarily encode energy into different energy states at successive groups of energy locations.

Fig. 13A is an illustration of an embodiment of an energy device 1300 at a first instance in time. The energy apparatus 1300 comprises an energy encoding element 1302, which is a passive energy encoding element and which is combined with an active energy encoding element 1318 at a first time instant, substantially suppressing energy propagation paths 1304 through energy positions in a first region 1306, and allowing substantially uninhibited energy propagation paths 1308 through energy positions in a second region 1310, said first and second regions 1306, 1310 overlapping and being offset.

Fig. 13B is an illustration of an embodiment of an energy device 1300 at a second instance in time. At a second time, in conjunction with the active energy encoding element 1318, the energy encoding element 1302 substantially suppresses the energy propagation path 1308 through energy locations in the second region 1310, and allows for a substantially uninhibited energy propagation path 1304 through energy locations in the first region 1306.

Referring to fig. 13A and 13B, the temporally aggregated uninhibited energy propagation paths 1304 and 1308 through the first and second waveguide elements 1312, 1314 form part of a volumetric energy field defined by a 4D plenoptic function. The energy apparatus 1300 further includes an active energy encoding element 1318 configured to temporally encode energy into different encoding states at successive energy location groups 1316 at first and second time instants.

Of particular note, the active energy encoding element 1318 provides a single state at the plurality of energy locations 1316, and in combination with the passive energy encoding element 1302 being divided into encoding regions, substantially suppresses energy propagation paths through corresponding waveguides within the system, and produces an effective significant increase in both resolution and angular distribution of the energy propagation paths through time aggregation.

In an embodiment, the one or more active energy encoding elements may temporarily encode energy into different energy states at staggered or braided energy locations.

Fig. 14A is an illustration of an embodiment of an energy-guiding device 1400 at a first time, and fig. 14B is an illustration of the energy-guiding device 1400 at a second time. The energy device 1400 includes an active energy encoding element 1402 configured to temporally encode energy at a staggered or woven energy location 1404 into alternating first and second encoding states 1406, 1408 at first and second times.

In an embodiment, the one or more passive energy encoding elements may encode energy into different energy states, and the one or more active energy encoding elements may selectively direct energy based on the energy states.

In an embodiment, the one or more passive energy encoding elements may encode energy into different energy states at staggered energy locations.

Fig. 15A is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy-guiding device 1500 at a first time, and fig. 15B is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy-guiding device 1500 at a second time. The energy apparatus 1500 includes a passive energy encoding element 1502 that encodes energy from an energy location 1504 into interleaved first and second encoding states 1506, 1508. The energy apparatus 1500 further includes an active energy encoding element array 1510 that selectively directs energy from the energy locations 1504 based on the encoding state of the energy.

In an embodiment, the first and second sets of apertures may be formed such that a plurality of apertures are formed for each waveguide element, and wherein the energy encoding element further comprises a split aperture energy encoding element configured to limit energy propagating along the plurality of energy propagation paths through the plurality of apertures of each waveguide element.

In an embodiment, the first and second sets of apertures may be formed such that a plurality of apertures or aperture areas are formed for each waveguide element, and wherein energy is guided through the plurality of apertures for each waveguide element in time.

Fig. 16A is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy device 1600 at a first time, and fig. 16B is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy device 1600 at a second time. The energy device 1600 includes an active energy encoding element 1602 and a second active energy encoding element 1614 offset from the first active energy encoding element, and further includes a third passive energy encoding element 1616 to encode the interleaved or woven energy positions. At a first time, the energy encoding elements 1602 and 1614 form a first region 1604 and a second region 1606 such that the first waveguide element 1608 is divided into first and second aperture regions 1610, 1612. At a second moment, the regions 1604 and 1606, and therefore also the aperture regions 1610 and 1612, are switched. The pair of active energy encoding elements 1602 and 1614 are provided in conjunction with the passive energy encoding element 1616 to provide a substantially filled aperture area that inhibits energy propagation through other adjacent aperture areas.

Fig. 17A is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy device 1700 at a first time, and fig. 17B is a diagram of an embodiment of an energy device 1700 at a second time. The energy apparatus 1700 comprises passive energy encoding elements 1702 passively encoding a first region 1704 and a second region 1706 and a second passive energy encoding element 1714 being offset from the first passive energy encoding element, and a third active energy encoding element 1716, the third active energy encoding element 1716 encoding a staggered or braided energy position at a first time instant such that the first waveguide element 1708 is divided into first and second aperture regions 1710, 1712. At a second time, active energy encoding element 1716 switches the encoding of the interlaced or weave energy positions so that it switches which aperture region 1710, 1712 of energy positions through which energy can propagate substantially uninhibited. The pair of passive energy encoding elements 1702 and 1714 are provided in conjunction with an active energy encoding element 1716 to provide a substantially filled aperture area that inhibits energy propagation through other adjacent aperture areas.

Fig. 18 is a top view of an exemplary active energy encoding element 1800 in which the waveguide array and active energy encoding system are configured such that the first waveguide element aperture 1802 is subdivided into 9 regions 1802A-I, forming a 3 x 3 grid, each of the 9 regions being encoded to propagate energy 1808 from an energy location 1804, and in which the 9 regions are temporally divided into 9 sequential time instances 1806 such that energy 1808 may propagate through a different region 1802A-1 at each sequential time instance 1806. For any given desired system refresh rate, the energy devices, energy directing surfaces, energy encoding elements will each operate at 9 times the effective refresh rate in order to sequentially direct energy to each of the nine zones, and wherein all other waveguide elements and active energy encoding elements are configured to coordinate in a similar pattern to propagate energy paths from energy locations that do not propagate at any of the illustrated time intervals, such that each energy location propagates cumulatively.

In further embodiments, the waveguide elements are configured to exhibit different angular propagation angles along the x-axis and the y-axis. In further embodiments, the angular difference is 2 times greater on the x-axis. In further embodiments, the angular difference is 2 times greater on the y-axis. In further embodiments, the angular difference is 3 times greater on the x-axis. In further embodiments, the angular difference is 3 times greater on the y-axis.

In another embodiment, the energy encoding elements are configured in coordination with the waveguide elements such that the energy encoding function is applied to active or passive encoding having the same angular distribution along the x-axis and the y-axis, a larger angular distribution along the x-axis, a larger angular distribution along the y-axis, or a larger angular distribution about any axis.

For the avoidance of doubt, any value of sequential sampling may be performed and implemented as long as the requirements of the equation and system are met.

Further embodiments place the active encoding elements below the array of energy waveguide elements.

Further embodiments place the active encoding element in the center of the array of energy waveguide elements.

Energy synthesizer for sub-pixel super-resolution

In an embodiment, the energy combiner may allow the capacity of two or more energy devices to be determined by the number of sections from the energy waveguide element, and the pixel structures aligned such that they are offset from each other along the x and y axes by a value that is the number of pixels divided by the number of sections, or the energy devices individually offset on a single axis by a suitable proportion to produce substantially identical overlaid virtual energy location structures. It should be understood that while the discussion herein may refer to pixels and pixel structures, these elements in some embodiments may refer to energy input or output cells in an energy device.

In an embodiment, an energy system may include: an energy device subsystem including a first energy device having a first plurality of energy locations and a second energy device having a second plurality of energy locations; and an energy combining element configured to relay energy between the energy device subsystem and an energy location surface formed on the energy combining element, wherein the plurality of energy locations are located on the energy location surface of the energy combining element.

In an embodiment, the first and second energy devices may be superimposed in a relative orientation such that superimposing the arrangement of the first plurality of energy locations and the arrangement of the second plurality of energy locations results in a third plurality of energy locations at the energy location surface, the number of the third plurality of energy locations being greater than the sum of the first and second plurality for each non-boundary region combination, the resulting energy location size being less than or different from either of the first or second energy locations.

In an embodiment, the first plurality of energy locations may comprise energy locations defined in a rectangular area.

In an embodiment, the first and second pluralities of energy locations may each comprise energy locations defined in a rectangular area.

In an embodiment, the first plurality of energy locations may comprise energy locations defined in a square region.

In an embodiment, the first plurality of energy locations may comprise energy locations defined in a rectangular area, and the second plurality of energy locations may comprise energy locations defined as any one of a square, a circle, a rectangle, a triangle, a hexagon, a delta structure, a regular or irregular area.

With this approach, the second energy device can be offset from the first energy device reference pixels by 0.5 pixels, for example, taking two segments as an example. By performing this sub-pixel shift, a higher effective resolution can be produced by the resulting sub-pixel structure.

Alternative sub-pixel structures may be utilized. In an embodiment, rectangular pixels are overlaid rather than performing sub-pixel shifting, one energy device is rotated 90 degrees relative to the other and mounted to the second surface of the energy combiner, such that a regular grid of sub-pixel squares is formed by two orthogonal rectangular structures and results in a higher overall effective resolution than the two devices alone.

Fig. 19A is a side view of an energy combiner system 1900 illustrating a method of overlapping pixel structures. Energy combiner 1900 is used in conjunction with two offset energy devices 1902, 1904. Energy combiner 1900 superimposes energy from energy devices 1902, 1904 on each other in an offset orientation to form a subpixel structure on energy combiner surface 1906. Fig. 19B shows a portion of energy combiner surface 1906 in a top view. Pixel structure 1908 from energy device 1902 overlaps with pixel structure 1910 from energy device 1904, forming a plurality of subpixels 1912. Fig. 19C shows a top view of an alternative embodiment of the energy devices 1902, 1904 and resulting energy combiner surface 1906, and shows how rectangular pixel structures 1914, when combined in an orthogonal orientation, can produce square sub-pixel structures 1916. When polymerized by energy combiner 1900, square sub-pixel structure 1916 may allow a 3-fold increase in pixel density with a resolution higher than the two energy devices 1902, 1904 alone.

In another embodiment, an energy combiner with more than two first surfaces is used to increase the effective pixel density beyond the first disclosed embodiment.

In further embodiments, the energy combiner is utilized with a passive or active energy encoding system.

Fig. 20 illustrates a further embodiment showing how the same variation in effective pixel density and pixel aspect ratio can be achieved by utilizing deformed energy relay elements, where an input rectangular pixel structure 2002 is applied to a deformed energy relay element 2004 at the bottom surface 2006, where the deformed energy relay provides a 3:1 deformed squeeze, as shown by the rectangular form of the energy element surface, and is applied in the opposite orientation of the rectangular pixel structure, resulting in the result seen at the top of the energy relay surface 2008 when the original structure 2002 is rectangular now comprising 12 square pixels.

In further embodiments, the energy combiner includes arbitrary magnification and arbitrary pixel structure.

In further embodiments, the energy combiners are utilized in the same deformed configuration.

In further embodiments, the energy combiner is utilized with a passive or active energy encoding system.

While various embodiments in accordance with the principles disclosed herein have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the claims and their equivalents issuing from this disclosure. Moreover, the above-described advantages and features are provided in described embodiments, but the application of these disclosed claims should not be limited to processes and structures accomplishing any or all of the above-described advantages.

It is to be understood that the primary features of the present disclosure may be employed in various embodiments without departing from the scope of the disclosure. Those skilled in the art will recognize, or be able to ascertain using no more than routine experimentation, many equivalents to the specific methods described herein. Such equivalents are considered to be within the scope of this disclosure and are covered by the claims.

Further, the section headings herein are intended to remain consistent with or otherwise provide organizational cues as suggested under 37CFR 1.77. These headings should not be used to limit or characterize the invention as set forth in any claims that may issue from this disclosure. In particular, and by way of example, although a title may refer to a "technical field," such claims should not be limited by the language under the title to describe the so-called technical field. Furthermore, the description of technology in the "background" section should not be construed as an admission that technology is prior art to any invention in this disclosure. The summary of the invention is not to be considered a feature of the invention set forth in the issued claims. Furthermore, any reference in this disclosure to the singular form of "the invention" should not be used to demonstrate that there is only a single point of novelty in this disclosure. Various inventions may be set forth with limitations in the various claims issuing from this disclosure, and such claims therefore define the inventions protected thereby and their equivalents. In all cases, the scope of such claims should be considered in light of their own merits and should not be constrained by the headings set forth herein, in accordance with the present disclosure.

The use of the words "a" or "an" when used in conjunction with the term "comprising" in the claims and/or the specification may mean "one", but is also consistent with the meaning of "one or more", "at least one", and "one or more". The use of the term "or" in the claims is intended to mean "and/or" unless explicitly indicated to refer only to alternatives or alternatives are mutually exclusive, but the present disclosure supports the definition of alternatives and "and/or" only. Throughout this application, the term "about" is used to indicate that a value contains an inherent variation in the error of a device, the method being used to determine the value, or variation that exists between study objects. In general, but in light of the foregoing discussion, numerical values modified herein by approximating words, such as "about," may vary by at least ± 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 10%, 12%, or 15% from the stated values.

As used in this specification and claims, the word "comprising" (and any form of comprising, such as "comprises" and "comprises)", "having" (and any form of having), such as "having" and "has)", "comprising" (and any form of comprising, such as "comprises" and "comprises)", or "containing" (and any form of containing, such as "containing" and "contains)", is inclusive or open-ended and does not exclude additional unrecited elements or method steps.

Words of comparison, measurement, and timing such as "at … …," "equivalent," "during … …," "complete," and the like are to be understood as meaning "substantially at … …," "substantially equivalent," "substantially during … …," "substantially complete," and the like, wherein "substantially" means that such comparison, measurement, and timing are feasible to achieve the desired results, whether implicitly or explicitly stated. Words relating to the relative positions of elements such as "near," "proximate," and "adjacent" should be meant to be close enough to have a substantial effect on the corresponding system element interaction. Other words of approximation similarly refer to conditions that, when so modified, are understood not to necessarily be absolute or perfect, but would be considered sufficiently close by one of ordinary skill in the art to warrant designation of such conditions as present. The extent to which the description may vary will depend on how much variation can be set and still allow those of ordinary skill in the art to recognize that the modified features still have the desired features and capabilities of the unmodified features.

The term "or combinations thereof" as used herein refers to all permutations and combinations of the items listed prior to that term. For example, "A, B, C or a combination thereof" is intended to include at least one of: A. b, C, AB, AC, BC, or ABC, and if the order is important in a particular context, BA, CA, CB, CBA, BCA, ACB, BAC, or CAB. Continuing this example, combinations containing repetitions of one or more items or terms are expressly included, such as BB, AAA, AB, BBC, aaabccccc, CBBAAA, CABABB, and the like. The skilled artisan will appreciate that there is generally no limitation on the number of items or terms in any combination, unless otherwise apparent from the context.

All of the compositions and/or methods disclosed and claimed herein can be made and executed without undue experimentation in light of the present disclosure. While the compositions and methods of this disclosure have been described in terms of preferred embodiments, it will be apparent to those of skill in the art that variations may be applied to the compositions and/or methods and in the steps or in the sequence of steps of the methods without departing from the concept, spirit and scope of the disclosure. All such similar substitutes and modifications apparent to those skilled in the art are deemed to be within the spirit, scope and concept of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims.

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