WO2023119541A1 - 広視野映像表示装置 - Google Patents

広視野映像表示装置 Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2023119541A1
WO2023119541A1 PCT/JP2021/047805 JP2021047805W WO2023119541A1 WO 2023119541 A1 WO2023119541 A1 WO 2023119541A1 JP 2021047805 W JP2021047805 W JP 2021047805W WO 2023119541 A1 WO2023119541 A1 WO 2023119541A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
user
optical system
wide
forehead
display device
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/JP2021/047805
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English (en)
French (fr)
Japanese (ja)
Inventor
陽一 井場
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Kopin Corp
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Kopin Corp
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Kopin Corp filed Critical Kopin Corp
Priority to JP2023568925A priority Critical patent/JPWO2023119541A1/ja
Priority to PCT/JP2021/047805 priority patent/WO2023119541A1/ja
Priority to US18/721,370 priority patent/US20250053002A1/en
Publication of WO2023119541A1 publication Critical patent/WO2023119541A1/ja
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B27/00Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00
    • G02B27/0081Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00 with means for altering, e.g. enlarging, the entrance or exit pupil
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B17/00Systems with reflecting surfaces, with or without refracting elements
    • G02B17/08Catadioptric systems
    • G02B17/0856Catadioptric systems comprising a refractive element with a reflective surface, the reflection taking place inside the element, e.g. Mangin mirrors
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B27/00Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00
    • G02B27/01Head-up displays
    • G02B27/017Head mounted
    • G02B27/0172Head mounted characterised by optical features
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B27/00Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00
    • G02B27/01Head-up displays
    • G02B27/017Head mounted
    • G02B27/0176Head mounted characterised by mechanical features
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B27/00Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00
    • G02B27/02Viewing or reading apparatus
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING OR CALCULATING; COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F1/00Details not covered by groups G06F3/00 - G06F13/00 and G06F21/00
    • G06F1/16Constructional details or arrangements
    • G06F1/1613Constructional details or arrangements for portable computers
    • G06F1/163Wearable computers, e.g. on a belt
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B27/00Optical systems or apparatus not provided for by any of the groups G02B1/00 - G02B26/00, G02B30/00
    • G02B27/01Head-up displays
    • G02B27/017Head mounted
    • G02B2027/0178Eyeglass type

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a peer-to-peer wide-field image display device.
  • HMDs Head Mounted Displays
  • VR HMDs Virtual Reality
  • HMDs not only HMDs for VR use, but also face mounting mechanisms have been invented based on the ideal that the housing can be firmly fixed to the face so that it does not move (see Patent Document 1). .
  • the incident range of the image light to the eyeball defined by the exit pupil is also fixed. Therefore, when the angle of rotation of the eyeball in the vertical direction is large, there is a problem that the image light is blocked by the pupil and vignetting occurs at the pupil.
  • a wide-field video display device which is one aspect of the present invention, is a viewing-type wide-field video display device that is attached to the user's head by applying a pinching force from the front and back direction, and is housed in a housing.
  • a device main body including a display element and an eyepiece optical system; a forehead pad projecting from the device main body and in contact with the user's forehead; an occipital region contact body in contact with the user's occipital region;
  • a head pad and a mounting member that applies the pinching force via the occipital contact body, the vertical FOV of the eyepiece optical system is set to 23 degrees or more, and the wide-field image display device is configured to display the forehead pad.
  • the total weight of the front side is 300 gf or less, and all or part of the contact portion of the forehead pad with the user's forehead is 20 mm or more from the optical axis of the eyepiece optical system. It is characterized by being positioned within a range of 40 mm.
  • the movement of the eye muscles that move the user's line of sight up and down moves the forehead.
  • the pad and device body can be moved up and down.
  • the frontalis muscle which is one of the muscles of facial expression, moves due to the vertical rotation of the eyeballs due to the vertical movement of the user's line of sight, and the skin above the eyebrows moves up and down accordingly.
  • the forehead pad that is in contact with the eyebrows also moves up and down, and together with the forehead pad, the display element and eyepiece optical system of the main body of the apparatus also move up and down. Therefore, the display element and the eyepiece optical system also move up and down as the user's line of sight moves up and down, making it possible to avoid the blocking of image light at the pupil and suppress the occurrence of vignetting at the pupil.
  • FIG. 9 is an explanatory diagram for comparison with FIG. 8 showing a state in which an image is viewed on the wide-field image display device of the present invention
  • 1 is a configuration diagram that is an example of an eyepiece optical system and a display device that are applied to a wide-field image display device according to an embodiment
  • FIG. It is a figure which illustrates a regular optical path.
  • 4A is a side view showing a schematic configuration of the wide-field image display device according to the embodiment
  • FIGS. 4B and 4C are side views similar to FIG. 4A showing a state in which the line of sight is moved up and down.
  • 5A is a plan view of FIG. 4A
  • FIGS. 5B and 5C are plan views similar to FIG.
  • FIG. 5A showing modifications of the mounting member and forehead pad.
  • 1 is an explanatory diagram of an optical system and an exit pupil of a general HMD
  • FIG. 4 is an explanatory diagram of the relationship between the optical system of a general HMD, the exit pupil, and the pupil
  • FIG. 10 is an explanatory diagram showing vignetting occurring in the pupil of a conventional HMD.
  • HMDs were not limited to their intended use, and the mounting mechanism was designed so that they could be fixed to the face as firmly as possible.
  • the field of view is being widened by increasing the field of view (FOV).
  • FOV field of view
  • “upper and lower FOV” means an angle obtained by adding the upper and lower angles.
  • the rotation angle of the eyeball in the vertical direction increases as the FOV expands, and the pupil also displaces greatly in the vertical direction.
  • the HMD is fixed with respect to the face regardless of the rotation of the eyeballs, and the position of the image light from the HMD is also fixed relative to the face. For this reason, in the conventional HMD, the image light with little aberration passing through the exit pupil is blocked by the vertically displaced pupil (hereinafter referred to as "vignetting" at the pupil), and the observed image is distorted. , blurring, and shadowing occurred.
  • FIG. 6 is an explanatory diagram of the optical system and exit pupil of a general HMD.
  • FIG. 7 is an explanatory diagram of the relationship between the optical system of a general HMD, the exit pupil, and the pupil.
  • FIG. 8 is an explanatory diagram showing vignetting in the pupil of a conventional HMD.
  • the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC are arranged in order, and the exit pupil EP is set on the opposite side of the eyepiece optical system OC to the display element D. Further, a virtual image V visually recognized by the user is set by image light incident on the user's eyeball E (see FIG. 7) from the display element D through the eyepiece optical system OC.
  • the exit pupil EP is set at the same position as the pupil E1 of the eyeball E of the user.
  • the diameter dimension d1 of the pupil E1 varies, but is assumed here to be 4 mm.
  • the diameter dimension d2 of the exit pupil EP is assumed to be 8 mm, which is twice the diameter dimension d1, so as to be larger than the diameter dimension d1 of the pupil E1 by a predetermined dimension.
  • the virtual image point PA can be visually recognized by the image light that has passed through the eyepiece optical system OC.
  • the virtual image point PB corresponding to the display point Pb which is the upper limit position of the display area of the display element D, can be visually recognized by the image light that has passed through the eyepiece optical system OC.
  • the virtual image point PB is the upper limit of the virtual image V or a position near the upper limit.
  • the pupil E1 fits inside the exit pupil EP.
  • the user can visually recognize the virtual image V located above the optical axis A and below the virtual image point PB by a predetermined distance.
  • FIG. 8 shows a hypothetical state in which the average distance from the pupil E1 to the center of rotation of the eyeball E is 10 mm, and the eyeball E is rotated upward by about 37°. In this state, the pupil E1 is displaced upward by about 6 mm compared to the state of FIG. Also, although not shown, when the eyeball E is rotated upward by approximately 11.5°, the pupil E1 is displaced upward by 2 mm.
  • the HMD is fixed with respect to the face, the positions of the display element D, the eyepiece optical system OC, and the exit pupil EP with respect to the center of rotation of the eyeball E remain constant without being displaced.
  • the distance between the upper end of the pupil E1 and the upper end of the exit pupil EP is 2 mm in the state of FIG.
  • the distance between the lower end of the pupil E1 and the upper end of the exit pupil EP is 6 mm. Therefore, when the eyeball E is rotated upward by approximately 11.5°, the upper end of the pupil E1 and the upper end of the exit pupil EP overlap, and if the amount of rotation of the eyeball E further increases, vignetting occurs in the pupil E1.
  • the lower end of the pupil E1 and the upper end of the exit pupil EP are positioned at the same position, and the image light is almost completely blocked by vignetting at the pupil E1. be.
  • FIG. 1 is an explanatory diagram for comparison with FIG. 8 showing a state in which an image is viewed on the wide-field image display device of the present invention.
  • the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC move up and down according to the vertical movement of the line of sight (upward and downward rotation of the eyeball E) (the position indicated by the broken line in FIG. to the position indicated by the solid line). Therefore, the exit pupil EP can also be displaced in the vertical direction according to the vertical movement of the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC.
  • the present invention is effective in a wide-field image display device having a vertical FOV of 23° or more, in which the rotation of the eyeball E may exceed 11.5°.
  • the FOV above and below the image, which can exceed 37°, has a tremendous effect on a 74° wide-field image display.
  • the total weight of the front side of the forehead pad including the device body including the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC is 300 gf or less. With such a total weight, it is possible to avoid applying a large fixing force to the face so that the HMD does not move. As a result, the forehead pad and the device main body can be moved up and down smoothly according to the movement of rotating the eyeball E in the vertical direction (vertical movement of the line of sight), and the eye muscles and the device main body can be linked. If the total weight on the front side of the forehead pads exceeds 300 gf, the amount of movement of the device main body in conjunction with the vertical movement of the line of sight becomes small.
  • Such a wide field of view and weight reduction can be realized by using a small display element with a small number of pixels that can correspond to a large FOV as a recent technology. It can be realized by using a high-magnification, compact eyepiece optical system capable of creating a virtual image with a large FOV.
  • An eyepiece optical system and a display device according to embodiments of the present invention will be described below.
  • FIG. 2 is a configuration diagram of an example of an eyepiece optical system and a display device applied to the wide-field image display device according to the embodiment.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating a regular optical path. It should be noted that the present invention is not limited to the following embodiments, and can be modified appropriately without changing the gist of the invention. In the following diagrams, part of the configuration may be omitted for convenience of explanation.
  • FIGS. 2 and 3 show the configuration of an eyepiece optical system OC, a circularly polarizing plate CP, and a display element D according to the embodiment, and are used by a user looking into them from the left side of FIGS. be.
  • Each configuration shown in FIGS. 2 and 3 is incorporated in a housing of a wide-field image display device, which will be described later, to constitute a device main body.
  • An eyepiece optical system OC, a circularly polarizing plate CP, and a display element D are arranged in this order from the user's eye side (left side in FIGS. 2 and 3).
  • the eyepiece optical system OC includes a first lens L1 and a second lens L2 arranged in order from the user's eye side.
  • the first surface S1 which is the surface on the user's eye side in the first lens L1, is an aspherical surface.
  • a second surface S2 of the first lens L1 on the display element D side is a plane or an approximate plane.
  • a reflective polarizing plate (reflective polarizing film) RP and a quarter wavelength plate (quarter wavelength film) QWP are laminated in that order from the user's eye side.
  • the reflective polarizer RP is, for example, a wire grid polarizer or a cholesteric polarizer.
  • the third surface S3, which is the surface on the user's eye side of the second lens L2, is an aspherical surface, and has a convex shape around the optical axis A of the eyepiece optical system OC toward the user's eye side.
  • the third surface S3 may be an approximate plane around the optical axis A.
  • a fourth surface S4, which is a surface on the display element D side of the second lens L2, is aspherical and convex toward the display element D side. Further, the fourth surface S4 is coated with a half mirror (semi-transmissive mirror) HM.
  • the circularly polarizing plate CP is laminated on the display element D.
  • the circularly polarizing plate CP is arranged in the space between the eyepiece optical system OC and the display element D (more specifically, between the half mirror HM and the display element D) without being laminated on the display element D.
  • the circularly polarizing plate CP is, for example, a linearly polarizing plate and a quarter-wave plate superimposed thereon.
  • the display element D includes an image display surface S5 on which an image is displayed, a cover glass D1 that protects the image display surface S5, and a display element substrate D2 that displays an image on the image display surface S5.
  • the display element D is, for example, a display panel with a wide viewing angle such as an OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) panel or a micro LED (Light Emitting Diode) panel. From the viewpoint of weight reduction and miniaturization of the device body, the vertical dimension of the display element D is set to 1.5 inches or less.
  • the image light emitted from the display element D follows the normal optical path (including the folded optical path) illustrated in FIG. incident on the human eye (pupil).
  • image light emitted from the image display surface S5 of the display element D through the cover glass D1 first passes through the circularly polarizing plate CP. Thereby, the polarization state of the image light becomes a clockwise or counterclockwise circular polarization state.
  • a portion of the image light that has passed through the circularly polarizing plate CP is then transmitted through the half mirror HM, and the rest is reflected by the half mirror HM to become unnecessary light.
  • the image light transmitted through the half mirror HM then passes through the second lens L2 through the fourth surface S4 and the third surface S3 in that order.
  • the image light that has passed through the second lens L2 then passes through the quarter-wave plate QWP.
  • the polarization state of the image light changes from a clockwise or counterclockwise circularly polarized state to a linearly polarized state.
  • the azimuth angle of the plane of polarization is assumed to be 0°.
  • the image light that has passed through the quarter-wave plate QWP is then reflected by the reflective polarizing plate RP.
  • the reflective polarizer RP reflects linearly polarized light with an azimuth angle of 0° and transmits linearly polarized light with an azimuth angle of 90°.
  • the image light reflected by the reflective polarizing plate RP then passes through the quarter-wave plate QWP again.
  • the polarization state of the image light changes from a linearly polarized state with an azimuth angle of 0° to a counterclockwise or clockwise circularly polarized state.
  • the image light that has passed through the quarter-wave plate QWP then passes through the second lens L2 again through the third surface S3 and the fourth surface S4 in that order. Part of the image light that has passed through the fourth surface S4 of the second lens L2 is then reflected by the half mirror HM, and the rest passes through the half mirror HM to become unnecessary light.
  • the image light reflected by the half mirror HM then passes through the second lens L2 again through the fourth surface S4 and the third surface S3 in that order.
  • the image light that has passed through the second lens L2 then passes through the quarter-wave plate QWP again.
  • the polarization state of the image light changes from a left-handed or right-handed circularly polarized state to a linearly polarized state with an azimuth angle of 90°.
  • the image light that has passed through the quarter-wave plate QWP is then transmitted through the reflective polarizing plate RP, and passes through the first lens L1 through the second surface S2 and the first surface S1 in that order. Then, the image light that has passed through the first lens L1 passes through the pupil plane S0 and enters the user's eye (pupil).
  • the position of the pupil plane S0 is also the assumed position of the user's eye (pupil).
  • the eyepiece optical system OC shown in FIGS. 2 and 3 has a folded optical path created using polarized light and reflection. In the eyepiece optical system OC, two reflections are performed to form a folded optical path.
  • the eyepiece optical system OC is a coaxial eyepiece optical system having an optical axis A at the same position as the first lens L1 and the second lens L2. According to the configuration of FIGS. 2 and 3, a high-magnification, compact eyepiece optical system OC that can create a virtual image with a large FOV from a compact display element D with a vertical dimension of 1.5 inches or less can be realized. .
  • FIG. 4A is a side view showing a schematic configuration of the wide-field image display device according to the embodiment.
  • top, bottom, “left”, “right”, “front”, and “back” refer to the user U wearing the wide-field image display device 10. used as a reference.
  • the wide-field video display device 10 illustrated in FIG. 4A is worn on the head of the user U and used.
  • the wide-field image display device 10 is used as a looking-in type in which the user U looks into from behind, and can be applied to, for example, an HMD for VR.
  • the wide-field image display device 10 includes a device body 11 , a mounting member 12 and a forehead pad 13 .
  • the device main body 11 is also called a lens barrel.
  • the apparatus main body 11 includes a housing 15 that accommodates the eyepiece optical system OC, the circular polarizer CP, and the display element D (see FIG. 2), which are provided according to the right and left eyes of the user U.
  • the device main body 11 may be configured with a single housing 15, or may be configured with a pair of left and right housings 15 corresponding to the left and right eyes of the user U.
  • the device main body 11 has a nose pad 16 provided on the housing 15 .
  • the nose pad 16 is in contact with the user's U nose.
  • FIG. 5A is a plan view of FIG. 4A.
  • the mounting member 12 is configured by, for example, a rubber band (stretchable member) provided in a loop shape from both left and right sides of the device main body 11 .
  • the mounting member 12 is hung from one side of the user's U head while contacting the back of the head and extends to the other side of the head.
  • the portion of the mounting member 12 that contacts the occipital region is the occipital region contact member, and the mounting member 12 includes the occipital region contact member. Since the mounting member 12 exhibits stretchability, a clamping force is applied to the head of the user U from the front and back direction via the portion in contact with the back of the head and the forehead pad 13 .
  • the forehead pads 13 are provided in pairs on the left and right sides according to the positions of the left and right eyes of the user U in this embodiment. Further, the forehead pad 13 has an inclined or curved shape according to the shape of the forehead of the user U when viewed from above.
  • the forehead pad 13 protrudes rearward from the upper rear surface of the housing 15 above the optical axis A of the eyepiece optical system (not shown) housed in the housing 15, and the user can It is provided so as to be in contact with the forehead of U (forehead, above the eyebrows). Specifically, the forehead pad 13 is provided so as to press the forehead 0 to 20 mm above the eyebrows, although there are individual differences depending on the user U. In order to be able to press the area above the eyebrows, all or part of the contact portion of the forehead pad 13 with the forehead of the user U is positioned at a distance upward from the optical axis A of the eyepiece optical system. It is located in the range R from 20mm to 40mm.
  • the portion of the forehead pad 13 that contacts the forehead is provided at a position within the range R, or at least partially overlaps the range R and protrudes into at least one of the top and bottom of the range R. is provided as follows.
  • the forehead pad 13 presses the forehead of the user U backward through the stretchability of the mounting member 12 .
  • the forehead pad 13 contacts the skin above the eyebrows at the user's U forehead.
  • the skin of this part moves up and down in conjunction with the movement of the eye muscle that causes the user U to move the line of sight up and down (rotates the eyeball up and down).
  • the vertical rotation of the eyeball caused by the vertical movement of the line of sight of the user U moves the frontalis muscle, which is one of the muscles of facial expression, and accordingly the skin above the eyebrows moves up and down.
  • the forehead pad 13 moves up and down so as to be dragged, and the device main body 11 also moves up and down accordingly. Therefore, as shown in FIGS. 4B and 4C, the forehead pad 13 and the apparatus main body 11 move up and down in conjunction with the movement of the eye muscles that the user U moves the line of sight up and down.
  • FIG. 4B and 4C are side views similar to FIG. 4A showing a state in which the line of sight is moved up and down.
  • the device body 11 can be displaced upward.
  • FIG. 4C in which the line of sight is lowered to the edge of the image below, as compared with the state in FIG. 4A, the apparatus main body 11 can be displaced downward.
  • the forehead pad 13 when the forehead pad 13 is in contact only above the range R, the forehead pad 13 becomes difficult to move due to insufficient skin movement force, and the forehead pad 13 becomes difficult to move. When it comes to only contact, it becomes easier to get on the eyebrows.
  • the nose pads 16 are positioned on the left and right sides of the user's U nose, and are provided mainly to prevent the device main body 11 from shifting left and right with respect to the user's U face. In addition, when the total weight of the apparatus main body 11 and the frontal pad 13 is supported only by the frontal pad 13, the user U may feel discomfort in the head. be provided.
  • the total weight in front of the forehead pad 13 including all or part of the device main body 11 including the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC is 300 gf or less. If the total weight exceeds 300 gf, the weight supported by the nose pad 16 is too large compared to the weight supported by the forehead pad 13, and the amount of movement of the device main body 11 interlocked with the vertical movement of the line of sight becomes small. Therefore, the total weight in front of the forehead pad 13 is set to 300 gf or less.
  • the state where the line of sight is raised to the edge of the image is Fu
  • the state when the line of sight is lowered to the edge of the image is assumed to be Fd (FIG. 4B, FIG. 4C).
  • the pressing position of the forehead pad 13 and the pressing force of the forehead pad 13, which is the pinching force of the mounting member 12 are set so as to satisfy the following equations. Fd-Fu > 50gf As a result, it is possible to appropriately balance the amount of vertical movement of the apparatus main body 11 and reduce the sense of incongruity when wearing the apparatus main body 11 .
  • the forehead pad 13 since the forehead pad 13 is pressed against the forehead region R, as shown in FIGS. , the forehead pad 13 and the device body 11 can be moved up and down.
  • the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC see FIG. 1
  • the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC can be moved up and down in conjunction with the movement of the eye muscles that move the line of sight up and down.
  • the exit pupil EP moves up and down in conjunction with the movement of the eye muscles that move the line of sight up and down.
  • the pupil E1 can be accommodated inside the exit pupil EP (see FIG. 1). Therefore, in the present embodiment, vignetting at the pupil E1 can be suppressed, and the virtual image V created by the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC can be clearly displayed even if the user U moves the line of sight up and down. can be observed.
  • the total weight in front of the forehead pad 13 including all or part of the device main body 11 including the display element D and the eyepiece optical system OC is 300 gf or less. If the total weight exceeds 300 gf, the amount of movement of the device main body 11 linked to the vertical movement of the line of sight becomes small.
  • the eyepiece optical system OC in addition to the condition that the total weight on the front side of the forehead pad 13 is 300 gf or less, the eyepiece optical system OC has a vertical FOV of 23° or more.
  • the vertical FOV is 23°
  • vignetting occurs in the pupil E1 when the upward rotation of the eyeball E is greater than about 11.5°, and the eyeball E moves upward about 11.5°.
  • the image light is almost completely blocked by vignetting at the pupil E1.
  • the device main body 11 moves up and down in accordance with the vertical movement of the line of sight (pupil E1), the upward rotation of the eyeball E increases by about 11.5°, and the vertical FOV is increased. At 23° or more, an effect of suppressing vignetting can be exhibited.
  • this embodiment has an extremely large vignetting suppression effect when the upper and lower FOV is 74° where the rotation of the eyeball E may exceed 37°.
  • the mounting member 12 may be configured by a pair of left and right frame members 12a.
  • Each frame member 12a passes from both left and right sides of the device main body 11 to the vicinity of the back of the user's U head, and is formed in an arc shape along the shape of the head.
  • Each frame member 12a is made of a material that can be elastically deformed so as to change the curvature of the arc, and examples of such material include ⁇ titanium and nylon resin.
  • an occipital pad (occipital head contact body) 20 that contacts the occipital region is provided behind the frame member 12a. Therefore, by the elasticity of the frame member 12a, a pinching force can be applied from the front and back through the forehead pad 13 and the occipital pad 20. As shown in FIG. In other words, due to the elasticity of the frame member 12a, the forehead pad 13 presses the user's U frontal region backward, and the occipital pad 20 presses the user's U occipital region forward.
  • the frontal head pads 13 are configured as a pair of left and right frontal pads 13. However, as shown in FIG. may be configured.
  • a coaxial eyepiece optical system is used, but the present invention is not limited to this, and a non-coaxial eyepiece optical system may be used.
  • the present invention relates to a looking-in type wide-field image display device capable of suppressing vignetting in the pupil.

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  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Human Computer Interaction (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
PCT/JP2021/047805 2021-12-23 2021-12-23 広視野映像表示装置 Ceased WO2023119541A1 (ja)

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JP2023568925A JPWO2023119541A1 (https=) 2021-12-23 2021-12-23
PCT/JP2021/047805 WO2023119541A1 (ja) 2021-12-23 2021-12-23 広視野映像表示装置
US18/721,370 US20250053002A1 (en) 2021-12-23 2021-12-23 Wide-field video display device

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PCT/JP2021/047805 WO2023119541A1 (ja) 2021-12-23 2021-12-23 広視野映像表示装置

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JPH11202798A (ja) * 1998-01-09 1999-07-30 Canon Inc 頭部装着型表示装置
JP2019053152A (ja) * 2017-09-14 2019-04-04 セイコーエプソン株式会社 虚像表示装置
JP2019061198A (ja) * 2017-09-28 2019-04-18 セイコーエプソン株式会社 虚像表示装置
JP2019535042A (ja) * 2016-09-23 2019-12-05 ヒューレット,ロバート・トロイ 光学装置のためのカスタマイズされた視覚システム

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US6388640B1 (en) * 1998-01-09 2002-05-14 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Head mount display
IL264154B2 (en) * 2016-07-15 2023-10-01 Magic Leap Inc Matching mounting arm

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH11202798A (ja) * 1998-01-09 1999-07-30 Canon Inc 頭部装着型表示装置
JP2019535042A (ja) * 2016-09-23 2019-12-05 ヒューレット,ロバート・トロイ 光学装置のためのカスタマイズされた視覚システム
JP2019053152A (ja) * 2017-09-14 2019-04-04 セイコーエプソン株式会社 虚像表示装置
JP2019061198A (ja) * 2017-09-28 2019-04-18 セイコーエプソン株式会社 虚像表示装置

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