FLIGHT TIME SENSOR AND SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM COMPRISING SUCH A SENSOR
20220050202 · 2022-02-17
Assignee
Inventors
- Sylvain Beaudoin (Créteil Cedex, FR)
- Sebastien Trapani (Créteil Cedex, FR)
- Frédéric Autran (Créteil Cedex, FR)
Cpc classification
G06V20/59
PHYSICS
G01S7/4868
PHYSICS
G01S17/894
PHYSICS
G01S17/36
PHYSICS
G01S7/4802
PHYSICS
International classification
G01S17/36
PHYSICS
G01S17/894
PHYSICS
Abstract
The invention relates to a flight time sensor (10) comprising:—a lighting device (11) comprising a light source (12) which emits a source beam (13) in the direction of a scene (3) comprising an object (4) which is capable of reflecting the source beam;—a detector (15) comprising a matrix (16) of photo-sensitive pixels (16A) which receive a portion (18) of the source beam reflected by the object; and—an electronic unit (19) which is configured:—to generate a modulation signal and to control the device by means of this signal so that the source beans has a source light power which is modulated temporally;—to process electric signals which are supplied as a function of time by the detector, each electric signal representing a fraction of the source light power reflected in the direction of a pixel; and—to deduce from the electric signals a characteristic distance (D.sub.obj) between the object and the device. According to the invention, the unit is configured, when the object is detected as being at a characteristic distance smaller than a predetermined threshold distance, to control the device in order to reduce the average source light power.
Claims
1. A time-of-flight sensor comprising: an illumination device comprising a light source and configured to emit a source beam in the direction of a scene containing an object capable of reflecting said source beam; a detector comprising a matrix array of photosensitive pixels and designed to receive a portion of the source beam reflected by said object in the scene; and an electronic unit configured so as to: generate a modulation signal and control said illumination device by way of this modulation signal, such that the emitted source beam has a temporally modulated source light power; process electrical signals delivered as a function of time by said detector, each electrical signal being representative of a fraction of the source light power reflected by the object in the direction of an associated photosensitive pixel; and deduce, from said processed electrical signals, a characteristic distance between said object and said illumination device, wherein said electronic unit is furthermore is configured so as, when said object is detected as being at a characteristic distance less than a predetermined threshold distance, to: control said illumination device so as to reduce, on average, said source light power below a predefined maximum value.
2. The time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 1, wherein said electronic unit is configured to generate a modified modulation signal in order to control said illumination device by way of this modified modulation signal.
3. The time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 1, wherein said characteristic distance is equal to the minimum distance between said illumination device and a particular point of the object reflecting said source beam in the direction of a photosensitive pixel of said detector.
4. The time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 2, wherein, with said predetermined threshold distance being less than 30 centimeters, the modified modulation signal controls the deactivation of said light source.
5. The time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 2, wherein, with said modulation signal being such that said modulated source light power comprises a periodic succession of light pulses, said modified modulation signal is adjusted such that the source light power comprises a reduced number of light pulses or light pulses of narrower width or of lower intensity.
6. The time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 2, wherein said electronic unit is furthermore configured so as, when said object is then detected as being at another characteristic distance greater than said predetermined threshold distance, to: generate another modified modulation signal; and control said illumination device by way of this modified modulation signal so as to increase said source light power beyond a predefined minimum value.
7. A monitoring system configured to monitor the inside of a passenger compartment of a motor vehicle and comprising a time-of-flight sensor as claimed in claim 1.
8. The monitoring system as claimed in claim 7, wherein the reduction in the source light power is further conditional upon the recognition of said object as being a head of an occupant of said motor vehicle.
Description
[0034] In the appended drawings:
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041] A monitoring system 20 is housed inside the passenger compartment 2 of the motor vehicle 1 so as to allow the compartment environment and its occupants (driver, front and/or rear passenger(s)) to be acquired.
[0042] This type of monitoring system is also called an “Interior Monitoring System”or IMS. It comprises a time-of-flight sensor 10 (hereinafter denoted “sensor 10”) that is generally positioned in the roof modules of the motor vehicle 1, but may also be in front of the driver, near the upright or in the central console.
[0043] The sensor 10 is oriented directly toward the occupants of the automobile and has a field of view 17 (see
[0044] As shown schematically in
[0045] Generally speaking, the sensor 10 faces a scene 3 containing various “objects” (represented here by geometric shapes) capable of reflecting light, in particular infrared (IR) light. These objects may for example be the head of the driver or of the passenger. In the following text, consideration will be given, by way of example for the explanation, to the particular case of the cube 4 as reflective object.
[0046] The illumination device 11, which may be controlled by the electronic unit 19 (the way in which this is achieved will be seen in the remainder of the description), comprises a light source 12 whose light power may be modulated, for example via current control.
[0047] When controlled in this way, the illumination device 11 emits a source beam 13 (see
[0048] The light source 12 is preferably a source emitting electromagnetic radiation at a wavelength that is barely visible or is invisible to the human eye. This light source 12 advantageously emits in the infrared region.
[0049] The light source 12 is in this case a light-emitting diode (or LED) emitting in the IR, at a wavelength of 940 nm, with an emission width of 60 nm (+/−30 nm around the center wavelength).
[0050] As a variant, the diode could emit at a wavelength of 850 nm, or else at any other wavelength in the near-infrared between 800 nm and 1100 nm, or even possibly at a wavelength in the far-red visible spectrum, between 700 nm and 800 nm.
[0051] In other embodiments, the light source of the device may be a laser diode, in particular a VCSEL (“Vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser”) laser diode, for example a GaAs/AlGaAs laser diode emitting between 700 nm and 1100 nm.
[0052] In particularly advantageous embodiments, the illumination device 11 may comprise an optical system located downstream of the light source 12 for shaping the source beam 13 (see
[0053] The electronic unit 19 is configured so as to generate a modulation signal, for example a modulated current signal, intended for the illumination device 11 (see arrow between the unit 19 and the device 11 in
[0054] Controlled by way of this modulation signal, the light source 12 emits a source light beam 13 that has a source light power P.sub.s that is temporally modulated.
[0055] This may be seen in
[0056] The modulation signal is in this case such that, during an activation period T.sub.on (also called “integration period”), typically between 1 μs and 10 ms, the illumination device emits a periodic succession of square-wave pulses 21 of peak power P.sub.0 and of width Δt between 5 nanoseconds and 500 nanoseconds, at a frequency between 1 and 100 megahertz (MHz).
[0057] During another period, called inactivation period To, the modulation signal is such that the illumination device 11 does not emit a source beam (the current signal received at the input of the illumination device—and therefore of the light source—for example being a zero current signal).
[0058] The set formed by the activation period T.sub.on and the inactivation period T.sub.off constitutes an acquisition period T.sub.acq.
[0059] In other embodiments, the modulation signal could be a sinusoidal signal, such that the source light power is modulated sinusoidally as a function of time.
[0060] As shown in
[0061] This detector 15 is a matrix detector (for example a “focal plane array”) and comprises a matrix array 16 of photosensitive pixels (“pixel array”), photosensitive in particular at the emission wavelength of the light source 12, that is to say in the infrared here.
[0062] Advantageously, the detector 15 may also comprise a collection optic, for example a simple lens or a more complex optical system.
[0063] The detector 15 receives a portion 18 of the source beam 13 (reflected beam 18) reflected by the object 4 in the direction of the detector 15.
[0064] Since the source beam 13 is temporally modulated, the reflected beam 18 is also temporally modulated (the reflection from the object 4 does not modify this property).
[0065] Due to the propagation of light from the light source 12 to the object 4, and then from the object 4 to the detector 15, there is a shift (“time shift”) at arrival between the time when the source beam 14 is emitted and the time when the reflected beam 18 is collected by the matrix array 16 of the detector 15. By determining this time shift, it is possible to ascertain the time of flight of the light between the illumination device 11 and the detector 15 (see the Texas Instruments document cited above).
[0066] This determination of the time of flight may be performed for each pixel of the matrix array 16, such that it is then possible to reconstruct a true three-dimensional map of the scene 3 in front of the sensor 10. Specifically, each photosensitive pixel of the matrix array 16 delivers an electrical signal as a function of time that is proportional to the amount of light received by the pixel,
[0067] For example, for the particular pixel 16A in
[0068] The electronic unit 19 of the sensor 10 is appropriately configured so as to: [0069] process these electrical signals delivered as a function of time by the detector 15; and [0070] deduce, from the processed electrical signals, a characteristic distance D.sub.obj between the object 4 in the scene 3 and the illumination device 11.
[0071] According to the invention, the electronic unit 19 is furthermore configured so as, when the object 4 is detected as being at a characteristic distance D.sub.obj less than a predetermined threshold distance D.sub.min, to: [0072] generate a modified modulation signal; and [0073] control the illumination device 11 by way of this modified modulation signal so as to reduce, on average, the source light power P.sub.s below a predefined maximum value P.sub.max.
[0074] In other words, if the sensor 10 detects that the object 4 is too close, then it decreases the average power of the light source 12 so as to limit the infrared radiation received by the object 4 with the source beam 13.
[0075] In one preferred embodiment of the monitoring system 20 from
[0076] Specifically, in a motor vehicle context, this may be useful when the detected object 4 is the head of a person (driver or passenger), because this avoids irradiating the skin and/or the eyes of the person with an excessively high power, which could be problematic in some situations.
[0077] The object may be recognized as being the head of an occupant of the vehicle for example by determining that the visible surface or the volume of said object corresponds to that of a human head.
[0078] In another example, the monitoring system includes processing by software capable of distinguishing, in a three-dimensional representation of the observed scene, that the detected volume is a human head.
[0079]
[0080] As may be seen in this
[0081] In one alternative embodiment, it would be possible to keep all of the pulses of the modulation of the source beam 13 and to reduce the peak power of the pulses, for example to a value P.sub.0/2 (so as to have an average light power of half). This may be achieved easily by dividing the modulation current sent to the light source 12 by two.
[0082] In yet another alternative embodiment, it would be possible to keep all of the pulses of the activation period T.sub.on but to reduce the width of the pulses (for example by dividing it by two).
[0083] In yet another embodiment, it would be possible to keep the pulses with their original width and power, but to reduce the duration of the activation period T.sub.on. For example, by dividing this period by 2, the average illumination power is also divided by 2.
[0084] In one particularly safe embodiment, the characteristic distance D.sub.obj of the object 4 may be taken to be equal to the minimum distance between the illumination device 11 and a particular point of the object 4 reflecting the source beam 14 in the direction of a photosensitive pixel 16A of the detector 15.
[0085] Thus, in this embodiment, it is sufficient for a single particular point of the object 4 (for example the head 5 of the driver, see
[0086] In the general case, the threshold distance Drain depends on the average source light power P.sub.s.
[0087] In practice, the average source light power P.sub.s is determined so as to be lower than the danger levels defined by the IEC 62471 standard for light-emitting diodes and by the IEC 60825-1 standard for laser diodes.
[0088] In another even safer embodiment, with the predetermined threshold distance D.sub.min being less than 30 centimeters, or even less than 20 cm, the modified modulation signal generated by the electronic unit 19 controls the deactivation of the light source 12 of the illumination device 11. In other words, in this particular embodiment, the light source is completely shut off, for example by stopping the current driving the source.
[0089] The electronic unit 19 is advantageously furthermore configured so as, when the object 4 previously detected as being too close to the sensor 10 is then detected as being at another characteristic distance D.sub.obj greater than the predetermined threshold distance D.sub.min, to: [0090] generate another modified modulation signal; and [0091] control said illumination device by way of this modified modulation signal so as to increase said source light power beyond a predefined minimum value.
[0092] It is thereby then possible to detect the object that was previously too close when it has moved away. Specifically, the range of the sensor 10 increases with the average light power of the source beam 13. By increasing the source light power, it is ensured that it will be possible to detect the object 4 again when it approaches.
[0093] In practice, the other modified modulation signal is preferably identical to modulation signal generated before the object was detected as being too close. The profile of the source light power P.sub.s is then the one shown in