MICROLENS COLLIMATOR FOR SCANNING OPTICAL FIBER IN VIRTUAL/AUGMENTED REALITY SYSTEM
20210239992 · 2021-08-05
Assignee
Inventors
- Brian T. Schowengerdt (Seattle, WA, US)
- Lionel Ernest Edwin (Hollywood, FL, US)
- Ivan Yeoh (Tampa, FL, US)
- Aaron Mark Schuelke (Coral Springs, FL, US)
- William Hudson WELCH (Fort Lauderdale, FL, US)
- John Graham MACNAMARA (Plantation, FL, US)
Cpc classification
G02B26/103
PHYSICS
G02B6/0026
PHYSICS
G02B6/0015
PHYSICS
G02B6/0076
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A display subsystem for a virtual image generation system for use by an end user comprises a planar waveguide apparatus, an optical fiber, at least one light source configured for emitting light from a distal end of the optical fiber, and a collimation element mounted to a distal end of the optical fiber for collimating light from the optical fiber. The virtual image generation system further comprises a mechanical drive assembly to which the optical fiber is mounted to the drive assembly. The mechanical drive assembly is configured for displacing the distal end of the optical fiber, along with the collimation element, in accordance with a scan pattern. The virtual image generation system further comprises an optical waveguide input apparatus configured for directing the collimated light from the collimation element down the planar waveguide apparatus, such that the planar waveguide apparatus displays image frames to the end user.
Claims
1. A method for rendering a virtual image with a virtual image generation system, comprising: emitting light from a distal end of an optical fiber in the virtual image generation system, wherein the optical fiber comprises a longitudinal direction in a nominal position and is driven to vibrate in one or more scan patterns about a fulcrum along the longitudinal direction; collimating the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber into collimated light in a direction proximate to the longitudinal direction using at least a collimation element having a single lens; receiving the collimated light at a waveguide apparatus of the virtual image generation system; and generating a stereoscopic virtual image at least by diffracting the collimated light at a plurality of focal depths with at least an optical diffractive element in the waveguide apparatus.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the light from the distal end of the optical fiber diverges from the longitudinal direction before arriving at the collimation element when the optical fiber vibrates in a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising: configuring the collimation element to move with the distal end of the optical fiber to factor out movement of the optical fiber from light collimation at the collimation element that comprises one single lens.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: increasing a field of view of a user of the virtual image generation system at least by increasing a range of movement of the distal end of the optical fiber with an additional weight of the collimation element.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising: configuring the collimation element to include a collimation direction for receiving the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber without having a different collimation angle for the collimation element to accommodate a sweep of the optical fiber when the optical fiber vibrates in a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising: generating diverged light, which diverges from the longitudinal direction, from the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber at least by driving, using a drive assembly of the virtual image generation system, at least the distal end of the optical fiber according to a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns, wherein the diverged light is generated in a plurality of off-axis directions that deviates from the longitudinal direction when the optical fiber is in the nominal position.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein generating the diverged light comprising: controlling deflection of the distal end of the optical fiber at least by independently driving the optical fiber to vibrate in at least a first direction and a second direction based at least in part upon a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns.
8. The method of claim 6, further comprising: converging the diverged light in the plurality of off-axis directions towards the longitudinal direction by using at least an optical modulation apparatus of the virtual image generation system.
9. The method of claim 6, further comprising: converging the diverged light in the plurality of off-axis directions towards a central portion of an optical waveguide as converged light by using at least an optical modulation apparatus of the virtual image generation system; and propagating the converged light to an exit pupil of the virtual image generation system with at least the optical waveguide.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the central portion of the optical waveguide comprises a focal point at a center of the optical waveguide apparatus, and the optical waveguide comprises a diffractive element that is used to propagate the converged light to the exit pupil.
11. The method of claim 6, further comprising: converging the diverged light in the plurality of off-axis directions towards a central portion of an optical waveguide as converged light by using at least an optical modulation apparatus of the virtual image generation system; and propagating the converged light to an exit pupil of the virtual image generation system with at least the optical waveguide;
12. The method of claim 1, further comprising: identifying a first diffractive optical element and a second diffractive optical element of an optical waveguide, the first diffractive optical element corresponding to a first focal depth of the plurality of focal depths, and the second diffractive optical element corresponding to a second focal depth of the plurality of focal depths; generating the stereoscopic image at the plurality of focal depths at least by dynamically switching on or off the first diffractive optical element or the second diffractive optical element, wherein the collimated light or the converted light is selectively directed to the optical waveguide without dynamically switching on or off the first or the second diffractive optical element.
13. A virtual image generation system for rendering a virtual image, comprising: an optical fiber that emits light form a distal end of the optical fiber, wherein the optical fiber comprises a longitudinal direction in a nominal position and is driven to vibrate in one or more scan patterns about a fulcrum along the longitudinal direction; a collimation element that is operatively coupled to the optical fiber and comprises a single lens collimates the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber into collimated light in a direction proximate to the longitudinal direction; a waveguide apparatus that is operatively coupled to the collimation element and receives the collimated light; and a graphics processing unit that is operatively coupled to the waveguide apparatus and generates a stereoscopic virtual image at least by diffracting the collimated light at a plurality of focal depths with at least an optical diffractive element in the waveguide apparatus.
14. The virtual image generation system of claim 13, further comprising a microprocessor that executes an instruction stored in a non-transitory machine-readable storage medium, wherein execution of the instruction by the microprocessor causes the microprocessor to configure the collimation element to move with the distal end of the optical fiber to factor out movement of the optical fiber from light collimation at the collimation element that comprises one single lens.
15. The virtual image generation system of claim 13, further comprising a microprocessor that executes an instruction stored in a non-transitory machine-readable storage medium, wherein execution of the instruction by the microprocessor causes the microprocessor to increase a field of view of a user of the virtual image generation system at least by increasing a range of movement of the distal end of the optical fiber with an additional weight of the collimation element.
16. The virtual image generation system of claim 13, further comprising a microprocessor that executes an instruction stored in a non-transitory machine-readable storage medium, wherein execution of the instruction by the microprocessor causes the microprocessor to configure the collimation element to include a collimation direction for receiving the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber without having a different collimation angle for the collimation element to accommodate a sweep of the optical fiber when the optical fiber vibrates in a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns.
17. The virtual image generation system of claim 13, further comprising a microprocessor that executes an instruction stored in a non-transitory machine-readable storage medium, wherein execution of the instruction by the microprocessor causes the microprocessor to generate diverged light, which diverges from the longitudinal direction, from the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber at least by driving, using a drive assembly of the virtual image generation system, at least the distal end of the optical fiber according to a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns, wherein the diverged light is generated in a plurality of off-axis directions that deviates from the longitudinal direction when the optical fiber is in the nominal position.
18. A virtual image generation system for rendering a virtual image, comprising: means for emitting light from a distal end of an optical fiber in the virtual image generation system, wherein the optical fiber comprises a longitudinal direction in a nominal position and is driven to vibrate in one or more scan patterns about a fulcrum along the longitudinal direction; means for collimating the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber into collimated light in a direction proximate to the longitudinal direction using at least a collimation element having a single lens; means for receiving the collimated light at a waveguide apparatus of the virtual image generation system; and means for generating a stereoscopic virtual image at least by diffracting the collimated light at a plurality of focal depths with at least an optical diffractive element in the waveguide apparatus.
19. The virtual image generation system of claim 18, further comprising: means for generating diverged light, which diverges from the longitudinal direction, from the light emitted from the distal end of the optical fiber at least by driving, using a drive assembly of the virtual image generation system, at least the distal end of the optical fiber according to a scan pattern of the one or more scan patterns, wherein the diverged light is generated in a plurality of off-axis directions that deviates from the longitudinal direction when the optical fiber is in the nominal position.
20. The virtual image generation system of claim 19, further comprising: means for converging the diverged light in the plurality of off-axis directions towards a central portion of an optical waveguide as converged light by using at least an optical modulation apparatus of the virtual image generation system; and propagating the converged light to an exit pupil of the virtual image generation system with at least the optical waveguide.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] The drawings illustrate the design and utility of preferred embodiments of the present invention, in which similar elements are referred to by common reference numerals. In order to better appreciate how the above-recited and other advantages and objects of the present inventions are obtained, a more particular description of the present inventions briefly described above will be rendered by reference to specific embodiments thereof, which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings.
[0024] Understanding that these drawings depict only typical embodiments of the invention and are not therefore to be considered limiting of its scope, the invention will be described and explained with additional specificity and detail through the use of the accompanying drawings in which:
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
[0045]
[0046]
[0047]
[0048]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0049] The description that follows relates to display systems and methods to be used in virtual reality and/or augmented reality systems. However, it is to be understood that the while the invention lends itself well to applications in virtual or augmented reality systems, the invention, in its broadest aspects, may not be so limited.
[0050] Referring to
[0051] The virtual image generation system 100, and the various techniques taught herein, may be employed in applications other than augmented reality and virtual reality subsystems. For example, various techniques may be applied to any projection or display subsystem, or may be applied to pico projectors where movement may be made by an end user's hand rather than the head. Thus, while often described herein in terms of an augmented reality subsystem or virtual reality subsystem, the teachings should not be limited to such subsystems of such uses.
[0052] At least for augmented reality applications, it may be desirable to spatially position various virtual objects relative to respective physical objects in a field of view of the end user 50. Virtual objects, also referred to herein as virtual tags or tag or call outs, may take any of a large variety of forms, basically any variety of data, information, concept, or logical construct capable of being represented as an image. Non-limiting examples of virtual objects may include: a virtual text object, a virtual numeric object, a virtual alphanumeric object, a virtual tag object, a virtual field object, a virtual chart object, a virtual map object, a virtual instrumentation object, or a virtual visual representation of a physical object.
[0053] To this end, the virtual image generation system 100 comprises a frame structure 102 worn by an end user 50, a display subsystem 104 carried by the frame structure 102, such that the display subsystem 104 is positioned in front of the eyes 52 of the end user 50, and a speaker 106 carried by the frame structure 102, such that the speaker 106 is positioned adjacent the ear canal of the end user 50 (optionally, another speaker (not shown) is positioned adjacent the other ear canal of the end user 50 to provide for stereo/shapeable sound control). The display subsystem 104 is designed to present the eyes 52 of the end user 50 with photo-based radiation patterns that can be comfortably perceived as augmentations to physical reality, with high-levels of image quality and three-dimensional perception, as well as being capable of presenting two-dimensional content. The display subsystem 104 presents a sequence of synthetic image frames at high frequency that provides the perception of a single coherent scene.
[0054] The display subsystem 104 comprises a projection subsystem 108 and a partially transparent display screen 110 on which the projection subsystem 108 projects images. The display screen 110 is positioned in the end user's 50 field of view between the eyes 52 of the end user 50 and an ambient environment.
[0055] In the illustrated embodiment, the projection subsystem 108 takes the form of an optical fiber scan-based projection device, and the display screen 110 takes the form of a waveguide-based display into which the scanned light from the projection subsystem 108 is injected to produce, e.g., images at single optical viewing distance closer than infinity (e.g., arm's length), images at multiple, discrete optical viewing distances or focal planes, and/or image layers stacked at multiple viewing distances or focal planes to represent volumetric 3D objects. These layers in the light field may be stacked closely enough together to appear continuous to the human visual subsystem (i.e., one layer is within the cone of confusion of an adjacent layer). Additionally or alternatively, picture elements may be blended across two or more layers to increase perceived continuity of transition between layers in the light field, even if those layers are more sparsely stacked (i.e., one layer is outside the cone of confusion of an adjacent layer). The display subsystem 104 may be monocular or binocular.
[0056] Thus, the display subsystem 104 generates a series of synthetic image frames of pixel information that present an image of one or more virtual objects to the user. For example, referring to
[0057] The frame 118 may include one or more fields, collectively 126. The frame 118 may consist of a single field. Alternatively, the frame 118 may comprise two, or even more fields 126a-126b. The pixel information for a complete first field 126a of the frame 118 may be specified before the pixel information for the complete second field 126b, for example occurring before the pixel information for the second field 126b in an array, an ordered list or other data structure (e.g., record, linked list). A third or even a fourth field may follow the second field 126b, assuming a presentation subsystem is configured to handle more than two fields 126a-126b.
[0058] Referring now to
[0059] Many implementations of raster scanning employ what is termed as an interlaced scan pattern. In interlaced raster scan patterns, lines from the first and the second fields 126a, 126b are interlaced. For example, when presenting lines of the first field 126a, the pixel information for the first field 126a may be used for the odd numbered lines only, while the pixel information for the second field 126b may be used for the even numbered lines only. Thus, all of the lines of the first field 126a of the frame 118 (
[0060] Referring to
[0061] Referring to
[0062] Referring to
[0063] Further details describing display subsystems are provided in U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/801,219, entitled “Display Subsystem and Method” (Attorney Docket No. ML-30006-US), and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/845,907, entitled “Planar Waveguide Apparatus with Diffraction Element(s) and Subsystem Employing Same” (Attorney Docket No. ML-30020-US), which are expressly incorporated herein by reference.
[0064] Referring back to
[0065] For example, in one embodiment, the virtual image generation system 100 comprises a head worn transducer subsystem 126 that includes one or more inertial transducers to capture inertial measures indicative of movement of the head 54 of the end user 50. Such may be used to sense, measure, or collect information about the head movements of the end user 50. For instance, such may be used to detect measurement movements, speeds, acceleration, and/or positions of the head 54 of the end user 50.
[0066] The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises one or more forward facing cameras 128, which may be used to capture information about the environment in which the end user 50 is located. The forward-facing camera(s) 128 may be used to capture information indicative of distance and orientation of the end user 50 with respect to that environment and specific objects in that environment. When head worn, the forward-facing camera(s) 128 is particularly suited to capture information indicative of distance and orientation of the head 54 of the end user 50 with respect to the environment in which the end user 50 is located and specific objects in that environment. The forward-facing camera(s) 128 may, for example, be employed to detect head movement, speed, and/or acceleration of head movements. The forward-facing camera(s) 128 may, for example, be employed to detect or infer a center of attention of the end user 50, for example, based at least in part on an orientation of the head 54 of the end user 50. Orientation may be detected in any direction (e.g., up/down, left, right with respect to the reference frame of the end user 50).
[0067] The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises a pair of rearward facing cameras 129 to track movement, blinking, and depth of focus of the eyes 52 of the end user 50. Such eye tracking information may, for example, be discerned by projecting light at the end user's eyes, and detecting the return or reflection of at least some of that projected light. Further details discussing eye tracking devices are provided in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/801,219 (Attorney Docket No. ML-30006-US), entitled “Display Subsystem and Method,” U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 62/005,834 (Attorney Docket No. ML-30017-US), entitled “Methods and Subsystem for Creating Focal Planes in Virtual and Augmented Reality,” and U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/776,771 (Attorney Docket No. ML-30005-US), entitled “Subsystem and Method for Augmented and Virtual Reality,” which are expressly incorporated herein by reference.
[0068] The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises a user orientation detection module 130. The patient orientation module 130 detects the instantaneous position of the head 54 of the end user 50 and may predict the position of the head 54 of the end user 50 based on position data received from the sensor(s). Significantly, detecting the instantaneous position of the head 54 of the end user 50 facilitates determination of the specific actual object that the end user 50 is looking at, thereby providing an indication of the specific textual message to be generated for that actual object and further providing an indication of the textual region in which the textual message is to be streamed. The patient orientation module 130 also tracks the eyes 52 of the end user 50 based on the tracking data received from the sensor(s).
[0069] The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises a control subsystem that may take any of a large variety of forms. The control subsystem includes a number of controllers, for instance one or more microcontrollers, microprocessors or central processing units (CPUs), digital signal processors, graphics processing units (GPUs), other integrated circuit controllers, such as application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), programmable gate arrays (PGAs), for instance field PGAs (FPGAs), and/or programmable logic controllers (PLUs).
[0070] In the illustrated embodiment, the virtual image generation system 100 comprises a central processing unit (CPU) 132, a graphics processing unit (GPU) 134, and one or more frame buffers 136. The CPU 132 controls overall operation, while the GPU 134 renders frames (i.e., translating a three-dimensional scene into a two-dimensional image) from three-dimensional data stored in the remote data repository 150 and stores these frames in the frame buffer(s) 136. While not illustrated, one or more additional integrated circuits may control the reading into and/or reading out of frames from the frame buffer(s) 136 and operation of the scanning device of the display subsystem 104. Reading into and/or out of the frame buffer(s) 146 may employ dynamic addressing, for instance, where frames are over-rendered. The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises a read only memory (ROM) 138 and a random-access memory (RAM) 140. The virtual image generation system 100 further comprises a three-dimensional data base 142 from which the GPU 134 can access three-dimensional data of one or more scenes for rendering frames.
[0071] The various processing components of the virtual image generation system 100 may be physically contained in a distributed subsystem. For example, as illustrated in
[0072] The local processing and data module 144 may comprise a power-efficient processor or controller, as well as digital memory, such as flash memory, both of which may be utilized to assist in the processing, caching, and storage of data captured from the sensors and/or acquired and/or processed using the remote processing module 148 and/or remote data repository 150, possibly for passage to the display subsystem 104 after such processing or retrieval. The remote processing module 148 may comprise one or more relatively powerful processors or controllers configured to analyze and process data and/or image information. The remote data repository 150 may comprise a relatively large-scale digital data storage facility, which may be available through the internet or other networking configuration in a “cloud” resource configuration. In one embodiment, all data is stored and all computation is performed in the local processing and data module 144, allowing fully autonomous use from any remote modules.
[0073] The couplings 146, 152, 154 between the various components described above may include one or more wired interfaces or ports for providing wires or optical communications, or one or more wireless interfaces or ports, such as via RF, microwave, and IR for providing wireless communications. In some implementations, all communications may be wired, while in other implementations all communications may be wireless. In still further implementations, the choice of wired and wireless communications may be different from that illustrated in
[0074] In the illustrated embodiment, the patient orientation module 130 is contained in the local processing and data module 144, while CPU 132 and GPU 134 are contained in the remote processing module 148, although in alternative embodiments, the CPU 132, GPU 124, or portions thereof may be contained in the local processing and data module 144. The 3D database 142 can be associated with the remote data repository 150.
[0075] Referring now to
[0076] The DOEs 204 (illustrated in
[0077] As illustrated in
[0078] Referring to
[0079] The relayed and exit-pupil expanded light is optically coupled from the distribution waveguide apparatus 222 into the primary waveguide 202. The primary waveguide 202 relays light along a second axis, preferably orthogonal to first axis, (e.g., horizontal or X-axis
[0080] The display screen 110 may generate an image at a single focus plane that is capable of being positioned closer than optical infinity. Collimated light propagates vertically, as shown in
[0081] Light entering the primary waveguide 202 propagates horizontally (as shown in
[0082] With reference to
[0083] In the embodiments of the display subsystem 104 illustrated in
[0084] The display subsystem 104 can enable the use of a single primary planar waveguide 202. The multiple projection subsystems 108 can be disposed, for example, in a linear array along the edge 234 of a primary planar waveguide 202 that is closest to a temple of the end user's head. Each projection subsystem 108 injects modulated light encoding sub-image data into the primary planar waveguide 202 from a different respective position, thus generating different pathways of light. These different pathways can cause the light to be coupled out of the primary planar waveguide 202 by a multiplicity of DOEs at different angles, focus levels, and/or yielding different fill patterns at the exit pupil. Different fill patterns at the exit pupil can be beneficially used to create a light field display. Each layer in the stack or in a set of layers (e.g., 3 layers) in the stack may be employed to generate a respective color (e.g., red, blue, green). Thus, for example, a first set of three adjacent layers may be employed to respectively produce red, blue and green light at a first focal depth. A second set of three adjacent layers may be employed to respectively produce red, blue and green light at a second focal depth. Multiple sets may be employed to generate a full 3D or 4D color image field with various focal depths.
[0085] Referring now to
[0086] In some implementations, each DOE 204 may be capable of being independently switched ON and OFF. That is, each DOE 204 can be made active, such that the respective DOE 204 diffracts a significant fraction of light that intersects with the respective DOE 204, or it can be rendered inactive such that the respective DOE 204 either does not diffract light intersecting with the respective DOE 204 at all, or only diffracts an insignificant fraction of light. “Significant” in this context means enough light to be perceived by the human visual system when coupled out of the primary waveguide 202, and “insignificant” means not enough light to be perceived by the human visual system, or a low enough level to be ignored by a viewer.
[0087] The switchable DOEs 204 may be switched on one at a time, such that only one DOE 204 in the primary planar waveguide 202 is actively diffracting the light in the primary planar waveguide 202, to emerge from one or more faces 210 of the primary planar waveguide 202 in a perceptible amount. Alternatively, two or more DOEs 204 may be switched ON simultaneously, such that their diffractive effects are combined.
[0088] Each DOE 204 in the set of DOEs can have a different phase map. For example, each DOE 204 can have a respective phase map such that each DOE 204, when switched ON, directs light to a different position in X, Y, or Z. The DOEs 204 may, for example, vary from one another in their linear grating aspect and/or their radially symmetric diffractive lens aspect. If the DOEs 204 vary from one another in their diffractive lens aspect, different DOEs 204 (or combinations of DOEs 204) will produce sub-images at different optical viewing distances—i.e., different focus distances. If the DOEs 204 vary from one another in their linear grating aspect, different DOEs 204 will produce sub-images that are shifted laterally relative to one another. Such lateral shifts can be beneficially used to create a foveated display, to steer a display image with non-homogenous resolution or other non-homogenous display parameters (e.g., luminance, peak wavelength, polarization, etc.) to different lateral positions, to increase the size of the scanned image, to produce a variation in the characteristics of the exit pupil, and/or to generate a light field display. Lateral shifts may be advantageously employed to preform tiling or realize a tiling effect in generated images.
[0089] For example, a first DOE 204 in the set, when switched ON, may produce an image at an optical viewing distance of 1 meter (e.g., focal point 230b in
[0090] Referring now to
[0091] Each of the primary waveguides 202 may function analogously to the operation of the DOEs 204 in the embodiment of
[0092] In one example, the projection subsystems may be selectively operated to selectively route light to the primary waveguides 202 based on the respective phase maps. In another example, each DOE 204 may be capable of being independently switched ON and OFF, similar to as explained with reference to switching DOEs 204 ON and OFF in the embodiment of
[0093] As illustrated in
[0094] Referring back to
[0095] The light source(s) 250 may take any of a large variety of forms, for instance, a set of RGB lasers (e.g., laser diodes capable of outputting red, green, and blue light) operable to respectively produce red, green, and blue coherent collimated light according to defined pixel patterns specified in respective frames of pixel information or data. Laser light provides high color saturation and is highly energy efficient.
[0096] The scanning device 252 comprises one or more optical fibers 256 (e.g., single mode optical fiber), each of which has a proximal end 256a into which light is received from the light source(s) 250 and a distal end 256b from which light is provided to the partially transparent display screen 110. The scanning device 252 further comprises a mechanical drive assembly 258 to which the optical fiber 256 is mounted. The drive assembly 258 is configured for displacing the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256 about a fulcrum 260 in accordance with a scan pattern, such that the outputted light diverges from a longitudinal axis 262 coincident with the fulcrum 260.
[0097] The drive assembly 208 comprises a piezoelectric element 264 to which the optical fiber 256 is mounted, and drive electronics 266 configured for conveying electrical signals to the piezoelectric element 264, thereby causing the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256 to vibrate in accordance with the scan pattern. Thus, operation of the light source(s) 250 and drive electronics 266 are coordinated in a manner that generates image data that is encoded in the form of light that is spatially and/or temporally varying.
[0098] In the illustrated embodiment, the piezoelectric element 264 takes the form of a hollow tube, in which case, the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256 is threaded or received through the piezoelectric tube 264. The distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256 protrudes from the piezoelectric tube 264 as a fixed-free flexible cantilever 268 (shown in
[0099] The drive electronics 266 are electrical coupled via wires 270 to drive opposing pairs of electrodes (not shown) to bend the piezoelectric tube 264 in two axes independently. The protruding distal tip 256a of the optical fiber 256 has mechanical modes of resonance. The frequencies of resonance depend upon a diameter, length, and material properties of the optical fiber 256. By vibrating the piezoelectric tube 264 near a first mode of mechanical resonance of the fiber cantilever 268, the fiber cantilever 268 is caused to vibrate, and can sweep through large deflections about the fulcrum 260, as illustrated in
[0100] By stimulating resonant vibration in two axes, the tip of the fiber cantilever 268 is scanned biaxially in an area filling 2D scan. By modulating an intensity of the light source(s) 250 in synchrony with the scan of the fiber cantilever 268, light emerging from the fiber cantilever 268 forms an image. Descriptions of such a set up are provided in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/915,530, International Patent Application Ser. No. PCT/US2013/045267, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/658,355, all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
[0101] As briefly discussed above, the optical coupling subsystem 254 optically couples light from the scanning device 252 to the waveguide apparatus 102. The optical coupling subsystem 254 includes an optical waveguide input apparatus 272, for instance, one or more reflective surfaces, diffraction gratings, mirrors, dichroic mirrors, or prisms to optically couple light into the end of the waveguide apparatus 102.
[0102] The optical coupling subsystem 254 includes a collimation element 274 that collimates light from the optical fiber 256. Significantly, the collimation element 274 is mounted to the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256. Because the collimation element 274 will move with the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256, the movement of the optical fiber 256 (e.g., lateral deflection, radius of sweep/curvature, and tip angle) need not be accommodated by the collimation element 274, thereby substantially reducing its complexity and size. For example, the collimation element 274 may comprise a single lens. In addition, the mass of the collimation element 274 enhances the whipping action of the optical fiber 256, thereby increasing the field of view of the display. Since the collimation element 274 is mounted to the optical fiber 256, the angle of the collimation element 274 need not be perpendicular to the curvature of the sweep. Thus, it can be appreciated that mounting the collimation element 274 on the distal end 256b of the optical fiber 256 relaxes the constraints of the display system 104.
[0103] Optionally, the optical coupling subsystem 254 comprises an optical modulation apparatus (not shown) configured for converging the light from the collimation element 274 towards the longitudinal axis 262, and in the illustrated embodiment, converging the light on a focal point in the center of the optical waveguide input apparatus 272, thereby allowing the size of the optical waveguide input apparatus 272 to be minimized, as discussed in further details in U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/238,052, entitled “Virtual/Augmented Reality System Having Reverse Angle Diffraction Grating,” which is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
[0104] Although particular embodiments of the present inventions have been shown and described, it will be understood that it is not intended to limit the present inventions to the preferred embodiments, and it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present inventions. Thus, the present inventions are intended to cover alternatives, modifications, and equivalents, which may be included within the spirit and scope of the present inventions as defined by the claims.