Combination reflective and holographic weapon sight
10443977 ยท 2019-10-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01S5/183
ELECTRICITY
G02B23/105
PHYSICS
H01S5/005
ELECTRICITY
H01S5/0071
ELECTRICITY
F41G1/345
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F41G1/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01S5/183
ELECTRICITY
G02B27/09
PHYSICS
F41G1/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A compact sight device has a housing with a viewing and a target end. A light source projects a light beam along a path. A holographic optical element (HOE) is disposed in the path of the light beam such that the HOE is illuminated by the light beam at an incidence angle defined with respect to a line perpendicular to the surface of the HOE. The HOE reconstructs an object beam with an image of a reticle, the object beam having an object beam angle measured with respect to the line perpendicular to the surface of the HOE. The incidence angle and the object beam angle are substantially equal. The HOE further reflects a portion of the light beam at a reflection angle substantially equal to the object beam angle such that a user viewing the object beam will also see a reflected image of the light source.
Claims
1. A compact sight device, comprising: a housing having a viewing end and an opposing target end, a viewing path being defined from the viewing end to the target end; a light source operable to project a light beam along a path; a holographic optical element (HOE) disposed in the path of the light beam such that the HOE is illuminated by the light beam at an incidence angle defined with respect to a line perpendicular to a surface of the HOE, the HOE reconstructing an object beam with an image of a reticle, the reconstructed object beam having an object beam angle measured with respect to the line perpendicular to the surface of the HOE, the incidence angle and the object beam angle defined as being on opposite sides of the perpendicular line, the incidence angle and the object beam angle being substantially equal; the HOE further reflecting a portion of the light beam at a reflection angle substantially equal to the reconstructed object beam angle such that a user viewing the object beam will also see a reflected image of the light source.
2. The compact sight device of claim 1, wherein the light source has a laser diode operable to emit the beam of light when energized.
3. The compact sight according to claim 2, wherein the laser diode is a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser diode (VCSEL).
4. The compact sight device of claim 1, further comprising a lens disposed in the path of the beam of light and operable to collimate the beam of light, the collimated beam of light illuminating the HOE.
5. The compact sight device of claim 1, wherein a reconstructed reticle is without a center dot.
6. The compact sight device of claim 1, further comprising a mirror disposed in the path of the light beam so as to reflect the beam of light onto the HOE.
7. The compact sight device f claim 1, wherein the HOE is disposed in the viewing path.
8. The compact sight device of claim 1, further comprising a non-diffraction element (NDE) reflecting the image of the reticle, the non-diffraction element being disposed in the viewing path such that a user views a target along the viewing path through the non-diffraction element from the viewing end; and the HOE is not disposed in the viewing path.
9. The compact sight device of claim 8, wherein the non-diffraction element (NDE) is selected from the group consisting of a partial mirror, a glass element and an optical element with a dichroic film coating.
10. The compact sight device of claim 1, wherein the compact sight is a weapon sight.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings, which are included to provide a further understanding of the invention and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this application, illustrate embodiment (s) of the invention and together with the description serve to explain the principle of the invention. In the drawings:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) The present invention provides embodiments of a combination reflective and holographic weapon sight. Such as a weapon sight may take a variety of forms. Certain examples of the present invention are shown in the Figures. However, the present invention is not limited to the illustrated embodiments. Additional advantages, objects, and features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description that follows and in part will become apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned from practice of the invention.
(7) One embodiment of the present invention provides for aiming a weapon sight and/or an optical device with a holographic image of a reticle that combines a reflected red dot as a center point, wherein the reticle may or may not lack a center dot. Such a reticle that lacks a center dot may be called an outer reticle and the term reticle is generic to an image with or without a center dot. Such a combination, if constructed in accordance with the present invention, may be immune to image drift due to wavelength changes of the light provided by the light source. Depending on the optical elements, the reflected center dot may have a focal depth effectively at infinity, while the holographic reticle will not drift because that reconstruction beam angle and object beam angle are the same.
(8)
(9) A laser source, such as a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) or other laser diode is shown at 20. It produces a diverging beam of generally coherent laser light 60, which passes through lens 30 to generate a generally collimated beam 70, which illuminates hologram plate 40 (also referred to as a holographic optical element, HOE). As shown, the angle 72 between light beam 70 and a line 42 perpendicular to the hologram plate 40 may be around 45. Part of the light illuminating hologram plate 40 is reflected as a light beam 80 toward the eye 50 of a user. This provides a reflected image of the laser source 20, which will appear as a red dot, with a focal depth determined by the optical elements. As shown, the angle 82 between light beam 80 and the line 42 may also be around 45. The angle of incidence 72 of the beam 70 will equal the angle of reflection 82 of the beam 80. Other embodiments may use angles other than 45.
(10) The illumination of hologram plate 40 also reconstructs a holographic image, which is visible to the user's eye 50. In some embodiments, this image may be a reticle, such as an outer reticle that lacks a center dot. Beam 80 also represents the object beam reconstructed by the hologram plate 40. According to preferred embodiments of the present invention, the reconstruction beam angle 72 and the object beam angle 82 are substantially equal. As such, the object beam angle should not change in a meaningful way if the wavelength of the light source 20 drifts. Therefore, the position of the reflected red dot and the reconstructed reticle should be stable. A sight incorporating the elements of
(11)
(12) The mirror 190 may be selected from the group consisting of a mirror, a partial mirror, a glass element, and an optical element with a dichroic film coating. Part of the light illuminating hologram plate 140 is reflected as light beam 180 towards the eye 50 of a user. This provides a reflected image of the laser source 120, which will appear as a red dot, with a focal depth determined by the optical elements. The illumination of the hologram plate 140 also reconstructs a holographic image, which is visible to the user's eye 50. In some embodiments, this image may be a reticle, such as an outer reticle that lacks a center dot. A user's eye 50 can view the image of the reticle, red dot and a target (not shown) through the hologram plate 140. In certain embodiments, the mirror 190 may be substituted with a holographic optical element.
(13) A further alternative embodiment of the present invention may also be represented by
(14) The sights shown in
(15)
(16) As will be clear to those of skill in the art, the configuration of
(17) As a starting point,
(18) A substantially dispersion-free and wavelength-independent hologram may depend on various transmission hologram equations. All angles are measured with respect to the plate surface normal. R is the radius of wave-front curvature that is measured at the plate. R>0, R<0, and R= means that the light source is a diverging source, a converging source, and a collimated source or plane wave, respectively.
(19) First, an angle equation (sin ) is a combination of the interference and diffraction equations. It describes the behavior of a single point on a hologram made with two sources of one wavelength, and illuminated by a third source of another wavelength.
(20)
If both angles are equal in equation 1, sin .sub.obj=sin .sub.ref may be used for making and sin .sub.out=sin .sub.ill may be used for readout, wherein m may be the diffracted order. m=1 or 1 may be assumed for this purpose.
(21) Second, horizontal focus equation computes where a horizontal detail (vertical lines) of an object is focused, given the radius of curvature of a representative object point, a reference and an illumination source.
(22)
If R.sub.ref and R.sub.ill are very large in equation 2, i.e. it may be a plane wave or close to a plane wave, then the two values disappear and equation (2) will become
(23)
(24) Third, vertical focus equation computes the location of a vertical detail (horizontal lines) of the image of an object. Vertical focus is also known as color focus. To compute the vertical focus R, first, the angle equation may be used and then the angle values may be substituted to solve for R.
(25)
If R.sub.ref and R.sub.ill are very large, i.e. it may be a plane wave or close to a plane wave, then the two values disappear and equation (3) will become
(26)
The two cos terms in the equation above are the same because both angles were assumed to be equal. Then the cos squared terms may be divided out such that equation (3) is equal to equation (2) such that
(27)
(28) As will be clear to those of skill in the art, the embodiments disclosed and discussed herein may be altered in various ways without departing from the scope or teaching of the present invention. As one non-limiting example, while the embodiments have been described as weapon sights, the present invention may also be used for sighting devices not for weapons. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.