Progressive optics for side mirrors ends automobile blind spots without distorting view
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| Credit: Optics letters |
A new optical prescription for automobile side-view mirrors may
eliminate the dreaded "blind spot" in traffic without distorting the
perceived distance of cars approaching from behind. As described in a new
paper in the Optical Society's (OSA) journal Optics Letters, objects viewed in a mirror
using the new design appear larger than in traditional side-view mirrors, so
it's easier to judge their following distance and speed. Today's motor vehicles
in the United States use two different types of mirrors for the driver and
passenger sides. The driver's side mirror is flat so that objects viewed in it
are undistorted and not optically reduced in size, allowing the operator to
accurately judge an approaching-from-behind vehicle's separation distance and
speed. Unfortunately, the optics of a flat mirror also create a blind spot, an
area of limited vision around a vehicle that often leads to collisions during
merges, lane changes, or turns. The passenger side mirror, on the other hand,
possesses a spherical convex shape. While the small radius of curvature widens
the field of view, it also causes any object seen in it to look smaller in size
and farther away than it actually is. Because of this issue, passenger side
mirrors on cars and trucks in the United States must be engraved with the
safety warning, "Objects in mirror are closer than they appear." In
the European Union, both driver and passenger side mirrors are aspheric (One
that bulges more to one side than the other, creating two zones on the same
mirror).The inner zone -- the section nearest the door -- has a nearly perfect
spherical shape, while the outer zone -- the section farthest from the door -- becomes
less and less curved toward the edges. The outer zone of this aspheric design
also produces a similar distance and size distortion seen in spherical convex
designs.
In an
attempt to remedy this problem, some automotive manufacturers have installed a
separate, small wide-angle mirror in the upper corner of side mirrors. This is
a slightly domed square that provides a wide-angle view similar to a camera's
fisheye lens. However, drivers often find this system to be a distracting as
well as expensive addition.
A
simpler design for a mirror that would be free of blind spots, have a wide
field of view, and produce images that are accurately scaled to the true size
of an approaching object -- and work for both sides of a vehicle -- has been
proposed by researchers Hocheol Lee and Dohyun Kim at Hanbat National
University in Korea and Sung Yi at Portland State University in Oregon. Their
solution was to turn to a progressive additive optics technology commonly used
in "no-line multifocal" eyeglasses that simultaneously corrects
myopia (nearsightedness) and presbyopia (reduced focusing ability).
"Like
multifocal glasses that give the wearer a range of focusing abilities from near
to far and everything in between, our progressive mirror consists of three
resolution zones: one for distance vision, one for close-up viewing and a
middle zone making the transition between the two," says Lee.
"However, unlike glasses where the range of focus is vertically stacked
[from distance viewing on top to close-up viewing on bottom], our mirror
surface is horizontally progressive."
Lee
says that a driver's side mirror manufactured with his team's new design would
feature a curvature where the inner zone is for distance viewing and the outer
zone is for near-field viewing to compensate for what otherwise would be blind
spots. "The image of a vehicle approaching from behind would only be
reduced in the progressive zone in the center," Lee says, "while the
image sizes in the inner and outer zones are not changed."
The
horizontal progressive mirror, Lee says, does have some problems with binocular
disparity (the slight difference between the viewpoints of a person's two eyes)
and astigmatism (blurring of a viewed image due to the difference between the
focusing power in the horizontal and vertical directions). These minor errors
are a positive trade off, the researchers feel, to gain a mirror with a greatly
expanded field of view, more reliable depth perception, and no blind spot.
To
prove the merits of their design, the researchers used a conventional glass
molding process to manufacture a prototype horizontal progressive mirror. They
were able to produce a mirror with more than double the field of view of a
traditional flat mirror.
Other wide-angle designs have also been proposed, but the new
design described January 28 in the Optics Letters paper offers a particularly
easy-to-manufacture approach to the problem of blind spots by seamlessly
integrating just three zones.
The
researchers claim that the manufacturing cost of their proposed mirror design
would be cheaper than the mirror design with the added small wide-angle viewing
section. Since mirror designs are stipulated by national automobile
regulations, the new design would need to be approved for use in the United
States before appearing on cars here.





