SPECIFICATIONStereoscopic television (unaided) on standard bandwidth- method and apparatusThe present invention relates to television, and particularly to a method and apparatus for stereoscopically reproducing standard television signals.
My new 3-D television invention utilizes the basic optical scanner and screen from my U.S. patent 4,231,642 issued 11-4-80 entitled "Stereoscopic Motion Picture Circular to Linear Scan TranslatorMethod and Apparatus" but does not require film. My new invention scans an array of images generated from solid state charge coupled device liquid crystal light valves (CCDLCLV's) or the equivalent, arranged in an arc within a horizontal plane. In U.S. patent 4,231,642 the picture surfaces are contained in the curved surface of a right circular cylinder. In addition, in my new invention, the input is a continuously changing set of N consecutive television frames of electronic standard television signals that are stored and accessed from either magnetic disc, tape or solid state memory sequentially in a scroll fashion through the image array.The frames are read into the charge couple device memories and then transferred in parallel to the liquid crystal readout image array. Thus the television images are exponentially fading after transfer due to the liquid crystal time constant but are scanned just following the transfer interval to assure a strong signal. The optical scanner is synchronized to the television signal. In my U.S. patent 4,231,642 a continuously rotating image motion compensator mirror drum is required to stabilize the image of the continuously moving film. The mirrors were parallel to the rotation axis and the film was not synced to the scanner. In my new invention the rotating drum is replaced with "stationary" roof mirror facets at 45 degrees to the horizontal plane of the N-image array. This is possible because the N-image array is also stationary.In my U.S. patent 4,231,642 the film traveled in one direction and performed correct 3-D image orientation and sequence for relative camera/scene motion in one direction. My new invention contains automatic sensing electronics for operating correctly on camera/scene motion in either direction.
My invention consists of a new 3-dimensional television system that uses existing single channel television bandwidth and provides "Holographic like" 3-D without the need for observers to wear glasses and provides the facility that allows observers to "look around" spatial images.
Man has sought for decades to reproduce scenes in stereoscopy without the use of viewing aids at the eyes of the observers and in a manner such that a number of persons might view such scenes at one time and without restriction as to their various individual positions.
I have found that by presenting a relatively large number of related images of the scene to he viewed behind a rapidly moving optically generated vertical aerial exit slit, the parallax thus occuring prevents one eye of each observer from seeing what the other eye sees at any and every instant of time.
The aerial exit slit being in motion, each eye sees a complete image within a short interval of time. I make this interval within the persistence of vision for human observers. The brain fuses the two eye observations into a single stereoscopic view image, as my practical results predicate.
Considering my system in greater detail, the perspective that one eye of any observer sees is made up to discrete vertical lines of image information taken at discrete instants of time. At these same instants of time, the other eye of that observer sees a completely different perspective. The net perspective for the two eyes is different, of course, because the eyes are not coincident in space, but are spaced apart horizontally. Considering the image as an entity, it is dissected in both time and space.
My invention provides a method of stereoscopically reproducing standard television signals comprising the steps of: providing relative lateral motion between television camera and scene; acquiring a number of sequential television frames or fields on an array of images; scanning said image array by a scan projector having one or more identical facets; causing any image of said image array to store a whole television field or frame during the scan interval by any singal facet of said scan projector; causing any image in said image array to advance to the next sequential television field or frame during the period between scans by adjacent facets of said scan projector; sequentially projecting said array of images onto a semi-specular screen, said scan projector being positioned during projection at successive positions about the arc of a projection circle, said screen being of larger radius compared with said projection circle; causing said screen to vertically scatter and horizontally reflect light from said screen to intersect on a line essentially tangent to said projection circle; causing said intersected light to move along said line; causing said scan projector interval between scans of adjacent facets to be within the period of persistence of vision of observers.
My invention also provides an apparatus for displaying stereoscopic television to observers situated in front of a television viewing screen, said apparatus including: a television antenna and receiver to generate video for storage in a multiple frame store means to receive a synchronizing signal for timing a synchronous motor connected to a scan projector and for timing for an image array; said projector having one or more identical facets; an image direction sensor to retain a stereoscopic scene; a fixed lamp to illuminate said image array sequentially through optics mounted on each facet of said scan projector; means to sense any change in picture element characteristic within said image array; means to direct said image array through projection optics, said projection optics being mounted on said scan projector; a stationary semi-specular viewing screen to receive said projected images and return the incident projected light to a transversely moving aerial exit slit.
The objects of my invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed specification and upon examining the accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1 shows a descriptive block diagram of an embodiment of my 3-D television system;FIG. 2A shows a partial detailed cross sectional side elevation of the optical scanner in a selected embodiment of my invention;FIG. 2B shows a partial plan view of the optical scanner according to an embodiment of my invention and delineation of a sectional boundary which FIG. 2A provided in side elevation;FIG. 3 shows a simplified plan view of the optical geometry of the 3-D television receiver optical scanner and screen according to my invention;FIG. 3A shows a simplified plan view of an alternate screen geometry used with the optical scanner of FIG. 3; FIG. 4 shows a plan view of the projection geometry used to determine the quantity of television frames to be stored according to my invention;;FIG. 5 shows a plan view of the projection geometry used to determine maximum size of screen elements according to my invention.
FIG. 6 shows timing waveforms for one of 24 images in the array according to my invention;FIG. 7 shows a motion direction sensor array (showing a match) for motion to the right;FIG. 8 shows five motion direction sensor arrays within a television frame storage media;FIG. 9 shows a block diagram of a solid state memory for sequencing television fields through Ndisplay matrix targets;FIG. 10 shows the timing sequence for loading CCD's for displays; andFIG. 11 shows a block diagram of an alternate method to obtain the 24 frame memory using magnetic disc technology.
FIG. 1 shows a perspective of one embodiment of my 3-D receiving set invention and introduces the main elements in the system. Details and possible variations in the embodiment are described using subsequent figures. In FIG. 1, the standard television signal is received by conventional antenna 1 and sent to a TV receiver where the desired RF channel is selected and converted to audio for driving a conventional loud speaker; horizontal and vertical sync signals are generated to control the timing for the individual Charge Couple Device Liquid Crystal Light Valve (CCDLCLV) TV frame modulators in the 1 20 degree arc radial array 2 (described in U.S. patent references to follow) and provide synchronization reference signals to motor 3; video is provided for the image direction sensor shown in FIG. 7 and FIG. 8 where the right or left sequential loading of subsequent TV frames into the array of CCDLCLV's 2 is determined. Video for N-successive frames (where N is later shown to be 24) related timing and power for the stationary array of CCDLCLV's plus power for the stationary projection lamp 4 is carried by wire from the source to those stationary components. Scanner 5 is connected to synchronous motor 3 and rotates at 1 800 rpm (30 r/s and in sync with the TV sync pulses). Scanner 5 is symmetrical about its rotation axis and contains condensing lens assembly 6, mirror 7, polarizer 8, a stationary conical array of "N" 90 degree roof mirrors 9 arranged in an arc under the 120 degree arc array of CCDLCLV's 2, an analyzer and projection lens assembly 10 and an aspherical reflector 11.Details of the scanner assembly are shown in FIG. 2A and FIG. 2B. Light from lamp 4 is condensed by condenser lens assembly 6, reflects from a mirror similar to mirror 7 in symmetry (shown on the opposite side of the scanner) passes through a polarizer similar to 8 reflects from the CCDLCLV array 2 and then reflects from the array of N roof mirrors 9 and passes through the assembly of analyzer and projection lens 10 and reflects from aspheric mirror 11 to the semi-specular and segmented screen 1 2 described in detail in FIG. 3 and text and in more detail in my U.S. patent 4,231,642. From screen 12, all of the projected light is gathered to a vertical aerial exit slit 1 3 which linearly moves across the imaginary viewing window 14 in 1/60 second (i.e. equal to a TV field period) as scanner 5 makes one-half revolution in1/60 second.Window 14 has diagonal corners identified by points A and B in FIG. 1. The aerial exit slit 1 3 occupies the entire height of window 14 where the window height is determined by the vertical scatter angle of screen 12.
My 3-D television projector system may be made to work properly with a picture modulator array of frames having the feature of light transmission as well as the relection method described in this specification.
FIG. 2A and FIG 2B show two detailed views of the embodiment of my stereoscopic television projector (shown in FIG. 1) according to my invention. FIG. 2A shows a partial sectional view (taken through section A-A of FIG. 2B) of a side elevation of the television projector FIG. 2B shows a partial plan view of the television projector with a portion cut away at the top right for clarity of the scanningmechanism. In FIG. 2A, element 20 of scanner 5 (as identified in FIG. 1) is connected to motor 3 bymeans of flange 21. The motor is fixed to the scanner's housing base 22 which is connected to at least three legs one of which is leg 23. The scanner housing is also made of sides 24 and 25, top 26, window 27, top 28 and 29. Located over the rotation centerline is baffle 30 held by spacer 31 to allow air intake through a concentric hole in top 29. Air exits the circular scanner housing through a peripheral slot(not shown) and the scanner provides the function of fan rotor for lamp cooling and television picturescanner. For simplicity in explanation, only one half of the symmetrical scanner is shown in FIG. 2A. Thescanner is symmetrical about the scan center line. The scanner is constructed of element 20. Condenser  lens housing 6 containing condenser lenses 32 and 33, the main scanner strut 34 which attaches to element 20 and lens housing 6. A first surface mirror 7 is attached to element 20. A polarizing filter 8 is attached to strut 34 over a hole in 34 sufficient for passage of condensing light from the omnidirectional and fixed projection lamp 4.Projection lens bracket 35 is attached to strut 34 and lens barrel 36 attaches to 35. Lens barrel 36 contains an analyzer 37 and projection lens 38. The optical axis of 38 is normal to the scanning rotation axis and to projection screen 12 of FIG. 1 to avoid the problem of keystone distortion. The scanner also contains an aspheric mirror 11 to project the wide horizontal angle picture to screen 12. Screen 12 is beyond the view of FIG. 2A or FIG. 2B but is shown in FIG. 1 and FIG. 3. Lamp 4 is attached to fixed reference 29 by bracket 39. Fixed bracket 40 provides a support for the cone bracket 41.Cone bracket 41 is fixed with respect to reference 29 and contains a series of either flat or roof front surface mirror segments the quantity of which may vary but is selected to be 24 (by a criteria to be described later) and equal to the number of successive television frames acquired by the N-frames of memory in FIG. 1. The 24 successive television frames are modulated onto the CCDLCLV solid state surface depicted in FIG. 2A as 2. The mirror segments are collectively represented by 9 in FIG. 1 and FIG. 2A. The 24 mirror segments around the cone shape attached to part 41 can either be flat or 90 degree "roof" mirrors. The roof mirror principle is described in my U.S. patent 4,089,597 and again in a more detailed manner in a U.S. patent 4,113,367 titled,"Roof ReflectivePolygon Scanning Apparatus" issued 9-12-78 to Ulrich M. Fritzler.The advantage of roof mirrors is that the light level does not reduce at the mirror borders to cause vertical black bars in the picture but instead the light level remains fixed to produce a continuous picture without the appearance of segmentation. The mirror segments 9 are radially staggered about the scan centerline of FIG. 2A with respect to the radial array of modulating image surfaces 2 such that they radially align at the center of the array of 24 frames (i.e. the 12th frame) but progressively move away from exact alignment from frame 11 toward frame 1 and from frame 13 toward frame 24 such that the greatest deviation from exact alignment occurs on frames 1 and 24. This "precession" of images is further described in my U.S.
patent 4,231,642. Precession of images assures that during reproduction of the scene, the original camera's optical axis (which photographed the scene) always tracks normal to the straight line determined by the projector's aerial slit locus. This relationship is shown in FIG. 3 (a plan view of the basic geometry of the projection system). The scan projector P moves in locus 50 at radius r. At radius 3r the segmented horizontally reflecting screen 1 2 with vertical scatter property is shown. Screen 1 2 is described in detail in my U.S. patent 4,231,642. Only three of the several screen segments are shown inFIG. 3 at locations a, band c. Each of these segments is normal to a line drawn to O on aerial slit scan line 14.Precession is such that the original camera's optical axis is projected along PQ independent of the position of P along the scan circle 50. Line PQb reflects to aerial exit slit S in a line bS which is normal to scan line 1 4. The precession of the 24 imates in CCDLCLV array 2 with respect to the arc of 24 mirrors on the cone shape of part 41, will cause the geometry of FIG. 3 to automatically occur during each scan cycle.
An alternate screen 1 2a without the segments of FIG. 3 but with a constant vertical cross section and with center curvature at point 0 and with radius greater than twice the projector scan locus 50 radius r (or about 4r as a good compromise), is shown in a plan view in FIG. 3A. This screen has characteristics identical to those described for the screen in FIG. 5 of my U.S. patent 4,089,597 datedMay 16,1978.
Lens correction for projection onto deeply curved concaved screens is described in detail in U.S.
patent 3,292,491, titled "Picture Projection Systems" that issued 12-20-66 to J. Hourdiaus.
Wiring of clock, power and video signals to the CCDLCLV assembly array represented by item 2 inFIG. 1 and FIG. 2A enters via a hole in top plate 29 of the scanner housing and a hole in bracket 39. The hole in plate 29 also provides inlet for lamp cord.
Television projector component sizes can be derived from certain assumptions and reference to geometric figures. FIG. 4 shows a plan view of the projection geometry for the 3-D TV projector according to my invention. It is assumed that the nearest spatial point that both eyes of an observer (EL and ER) can focus on is at point Q on scan circle 50. Point Q is at distance D to observer's eyes. Using a 21 inch diagonal standard CRT television of the 1 979 vintage as a size reference, the window mn width is 1 6.8 inches which means r = 8.4 inches in FIG. 4. From proportional triangles, 2R/x = D/2.5 = 0.4D but 2R/x = N = number of pictures in the scan window mn. Therefore N = 0.4D, but empirical data shows N = 0.2D minimum. For a view distance of 10 feet, N = 24 and x = 0.7 inches.FIG. 5 shows how the vertical screen segments 51 and 51' have normals that pass through reference point 0. It should be noted, however, that screen 12 is concentric with point C. Window mn is shown in front of scan circle 50. To find the maximum allowable width of the screen segment 51 or 51 ' the criteria is used that all screen incident rays from any given point along the scan path shall always be contained within the aerial exit slit width x. It can be shown from FIG. 5 that w = x/2 = 0.35 inches (maximum). There are 226 elements (minimum) in screen 12. Screen elements 51 or 51' can be made from horizontally brushed (to give vertical scatter property) stainless steel or other plastic surface as specified in my U.S.
patent 4,231,642 and my U.S. patent 4,089,597.
The description of optical scanning of adjacent picture frames and how they interleave to form the resultant stereoscopic scene is discussed in detail in my U.S. patent 4,089,597. Electronic scanning of  pictures can produce unwanted net effects to the eye if not handled properly. Frames of film present allpicture elements in parallel at the time of scan but television pictures occur on an element by elementbasis. The reason for selecting the CCDLCLV as the moduiation media for my 3-D TV inventionis that it has the property to store up a field and then parallel transfer the whole field so that decayis the same all over the picture. In my 3-D TV invention, picture viewing during scan and decay could bring unwanted (or "aliasing") effects to the viewer because what he sees is related to what is on the screen during the optical scanner interrupt period.Since the scan rate is one revolution in 1/30 sec,120 degrees (i.e. the 24 picture array arc) is scanned in 1/90 second. This corresponds to scanning one frame in 1/2160 seconds or 463 microseconds. Since the horizontal line sweep period is 63.5microseconds, only about 7 lines could be electronically scanned in a conventional TV projector while the optical scanner traversed the single frame on the 24 frame array. To circumvent the problems ofnon-uniform picture decay and partial scanning, I take the approach (in my invention) of complete field store and subsequent parallel transfer of the image to the display array. This of course requires that the optical scanner be times to the TV sync signal. A synchronous motor is selected over a DC servomotor because of its quiet operation.
Any number of scanning facets can be adapted to my invention but the time interval occurringbetween successive scans of a television field should be 1/60 second. One facet would require a rotor scan speed of 3600 rpm whereas 2 facets would have a rotor scan speed of 1 800 rpm. As the facetsincrease in quantity the rotor scan speed decreased but the complexity and cost of construction increases. A practical compromise for a home TV system would be 2 facets.
Commercial television uses 21 horizontal lines during vertical blank = 1334 microseconds. Theoptical scanner scan period of 463 microseconds/field fits into this natural blank period very well. FIG. 6shows the timing waveforms for the TV video signal, the interval allowed for the CCD to transfer aparallel field to the liquid crystal readout and the interval allowed for scan of the information according to my invention. During the field video time, the CCD is loaded with the entire field. At the completion of field video, the CCD transfers the entire field contents into the LCLV within 50 to 500 microseconds.
A 100 microsecond guard is placed following the load sequence to allow for any sync problems with the optical scanner. Actually the optical scanner could scan the LCLV any time between the completed CCD transfer until the next transfer occurs, but should be as close to the transfer time as possible to assure ahigh contrast picture. The liquid crystal natural decay time constant will gradually fade the entire picture(as a unit).
My invention is based on horizontal parallax caused by a relative motion (either left or right) between camera and scene. Either one can be in motion relative to the other. When an observer moveslaterally with respect to the spatial images in the 3-D TV projector according to my invention, he will "see around" the images as he would around the real objects in a real scene. In my "film" 3-D movie system in U.S. patent 4,231,642, the system was designed for relative motion in one horizontal direction. It was difficult to accommodate both left and right horizontal motions in the same viewer. It should be noted that strict horizontal motion is not required, but a "component" of horizontal motion isrequired to create the necessary parallax.In my new invention of 3-D TV without the needs for opticalaids at observer's eyes, the automatic adaptation to both left and right components of relative horizontalcamera/scene motion is easily achieved. To accomplish this, motion direction sensor arrays imbedded in the logic. FIG. 8 shows five of these sensor arrays within a TV frame. The details are shown in FIG. 7. CSis the center sensor. A few picture elements (pixels) to the right and to the left of CS are right and leftsensors SR (1-5) and SL (1-5), respectively. All right and left sensors look for a matched signalsequence of a short sampled video period (At) sensed at CS a fraction of a second before.When thematch occurs, the system knows the direction of relative camera/scene motion and can providesequential switching preprogrammed commands to direct the scroll sequence of pictures arrayed over the arc of CCDLC V's in the projector either from the right or from the left. The reason for including SL1 through SL5 and SR1 through SR5 in FIG. 7 instead ofjust using SL3 and SR3 along the horizontal lineincluding CS, is that the vertical component of motion needs sensing fiexibility as well as horizontalmotion. With this arrangement, the scene could move laterally anywhere between a plus and minus 45degree diagonal angle to the horizon across the television viewing screen and be sensed for proper leftor right horizontal component.
A description of the CCDLCLV was patented by Dr. Jan Grinberg, along with co-inventors MikeWaldner and Joe Jenny. Their U.S. patent is 4,227,201 which issued on October 7, 1980 entitled "CCDReadout Structure For Display Applications." The CCDLCLV device can be split into two fundamental systems -- the CCD portion and the LCLV portion. In the CCD portion, a serial television signal isconverted into a parallel image array surface consisting of charges on the image array proportional to the television scene within the frame at that time. Paul K. Weimer has a U.S.Patent 3,763,480 titled"Digital and Analog Data Handling Devices" - issued 10-2-73 and another U.S. patent 3,866,209 titled "Charge-Transfer Display System" -- issued  2-11-75. These patents describe a means to achieve the above image array surface charges which are available for coupling into a LCLV. A basic CCD U.S.
patent 3,654,499 was issued to George E. Smith on 4-4-72 and is entitled "Charge Coupled Memory with Storage Sites." The LCLV portion of the television readout device is described by Terry D. Beard inU.S. patent 3,824,002 titled "Alternating Current Liquid Crystal Light Valve" issued 7-16-74 and in  another U.S. patent 4,019,807 titled "Reflective Liquid Crystal Light Valve with Hybrid Field EffectMode" issued 4-26-77 to Donald D. Boswell. The photoconductor and external illuminated image input described in the LCLV patents are replaced by the CCD array.
Color may be added to a liquid crystal display matrix array as described in U.S. patent 4,006,968 titled "Liquid Crystal Dot Color Display" issued 2-8-77 to Michael N. Ernstoff.
My 3-D TV invention will also operate properly if the controlling light modulator picture surface does not allow decay but holds either an entire field or frame on display from a single scene perspective during the optical scan period. Such a device is the TITUS optical relay for television projection described in U.S. patent 3,520,589 titled, "Optical Relay for Television purposes" by Yves Angel andGerard Marie which issued 7-14-70. The use of this device in my invention would not be cost effective and would considerably increase the volume, weight and power compared with the CCDLCLV.
There are other solid state and tube type imaging surfaces which might be used to produce image array modulated light using either reflective ortransmissive means. Liquid crystal material is sighted in this specification as one of those means.
The memory used for storing up to N successive TV frames and providing a sequential scroll action of subsequent TV frames can be accomplished with a totally static system of random access memory (RAM). Other memory types might be selected but at this date RAM offers the fastest access compatible with television. To properly digitize a monochrome TV picture would require at least 8 bits per picture element (pixel) to give the proper grey shades to the picture. ATV frame with 0.25 million pixels would require 2 megabits storage per frame or 1 megabits per field. Since my invention suggests 24 frames for the 21 inch diagonal picture, 48 megabits of memory is required. This value would triple for color.
The following description will discuss monochrome as color simply triples the storage circuits and the drawing can be simpler for ease of explanation. Table 1 lists the meaning behind each of the legends shown on FIG. 9,  FIG. 10 and Table 2 for brevity. In FIG. 9, each of the RAM memories (i.e. M) contain a field of TV. The TV signal is split into sync, audio and video by conventional and well known methods.
The sync signal provides the reference timing for the control of switches, memory addressing, read and write commands to memory and reference signal to the servo motor control for the optical scanner.
There are buiit-in delays to compensate for memory delays. The video signals are converted from analog to 8 bit digital and switched either to the odd or even memory chain depending on the TV waveform timing. When the memories are unloaded by read commands, the sequential video is converted from digital back to analog and the video signals are switched in proper odd/even sequence into the CCD portion of CCDLCLV displays D1 through DN by switches controlled from the timing logic. The timing logic also provides serial clock and parallel transfer clocks for CCDLCLV operation for each of the 24 displays in accordance with previously reference U.S. patents.
TABLE 1Legend for FIG. 9 and FIG. 10 and Table 2M = random access memory (RAM) Mio = memory contents for field (odd) Mle = memory contents for field (even)R = readW = writeF = field (where there are 2 fields/frame of TV)F10 = field-i (odd) Fle = field-I (even) DN = number of Nth display matrix CCDLCLV targetR/W = read/writeA = addressC = controlD/A = digital to analog converter sw = switchCCDLCLV = Charge Coupled Device Liquid Crystal Light Valve.
e = eveno = odd  TABLE 2Sequence of Operations for FIG. 9 MemoriesDuring the First Four TV Fields
  Period Events During Period  Field Period From To Number From To  TO  T1  1 WF10 M10   T1  T2 2  WFie   Mle     RF1o D1    WF10  M20    T2 T3 3 WF20 M10  RF1o D2   WF10  M30   RF1e  D1   WFie  M2e  T3 T4 4 WF2e  Mie    RF20 D1  WF20 . M20   RFIe   D2     WFle  M3e  RF10 D3 ContinuedOdd memories are written while reading even memories. Even memories are written while readingodd memories. The electronic sequencer video select switch can load displays from either the left orright side depending on the direction of image motion translation sensed by the image direction sensorof FIG. 7 and FIG. 8.
Only four of the proposed 24 stages are shown for clarity in FIG. 9.
Table 2 shows the sequence of operations for FIG. 9 memories during the first four Televisionfields. Only four are shown for brevity and are representative.
FIG. 10 shows the timing sequence for loading CCDLCLV matricies for the first five TV frames andfor 8 of the 24 matrix displays.
Another embodiment of my 3-D TV receiver invention utilizes a magnetic disc to store the 24frames instead of the all solid state memory approach previously described. The disc approach is shownin FIG. 11. The standard 2:1 interlaced raster scan display operates at 60 fields per second (30 frames per second) rate, thus the magnetic disc rotation is normally set at 3600 rpm or 1800 rpm. These disc .speeds allow either a TV field or frame to be stored in one revolution of the disc. The two most common methods of turning the disc are an AC synchronous motor and a DC servo drive motor. Use of the ACsynchronous motor is selected for my 3-D TV invention because of its quiet operation.The motor willallow the disc to be synchronized to the TV signal to assure that the CCDLCLV loading time falls close tothe end of a field write period. For this reason, both disc and optical scanner are driven by the samemotor.
The basic memory of a magnetic disc recorder is derived from the remanent magnetization  properties of the disc coating. The data patterns recorded on the disc are established by fields set up from the write head as current is passed through its winding. During replay, as the read head passes through the transitions of this pattern, some of the flux goes through the low reluctance path of the head developing a voltage across the head winding proportional to the written data.
FIG. 11 shows a simplified block diagram of the record and playback disc system. Only 4 of the N write heads 61 and their corresponding read heads 62 and display frames 2 are shown. A careful study of timing for the disc based on two TV fields or one TV frame per disc track, will show a conflict if a single read/write head is used per track but no conflict if a separate read and write head is arranged 1 80 degrees apart on the disc for each of the required 24 tracks. Therefore an odd field may be written while an even field is read or vice versa. In FIG. 11, a standard TV antenna 60, receives a standard TV broadcast.A conventional TV receiver RF/IF, video amplifiers, sync stripper and soud discriminator separate video, sync and audio so that the video is sent to the direction sensor (described in FIG. 7 andFIG. 8 with text); sync is used to time the CCDLCLV array and motor; and the audio drives a conventional loud speaker. The switch signal for right/left or left/right picture scan sequence across the 24 frame CCDLCLV array is sent to the Electronic Sequence Video Select Switch where a preprogrammed video switching sequence determines which picture of the series of 24 goes to which of the 24 display modulators. The magnetic disc 63 contains a timing track head 64 that provides timing feed back for motor 3 speed. The TV sync provides a motor speed reference plus control of the basic timing circuits for developing clock timing for the CCDLCLV array 2.Magnetic disc 63 and optical scanner 5 are shown connected together and driven by common motor 3. Optical scanner 5 is greatly simplified for ease of illustration. For a detailed description of scanner 5, reference FIG. 1, FIG. 2A andFIG. 2B and associated text.
Sequential TV frames are written onto the track numbers of the disc in the sequence shown inTable 3 while the track numbers are read from the disc into the N displays in the sequence shown inTable 4.
TABLE 3Recording Sequence of TV Frames on Trucksof Magnetic Disc (4 of N shown)
 I  TrackS  4 3 2 1 S r  4 3 2 5  4 3 6 5  4 7 6 5  8 7 6 5 TV Frame  Numbers  8 7 6 9  8 7 0 9  8 II 10 9  12 11 10 9 Continued  Th TABLE 4Reading Sequence of TV Frames FromTracks of Magnetic Disc into CCD Matricesof Displays - (4 of N Displays shown)
  Displays DN ~~~ - -D4 D3 D2 D1  I 2  1 2 3  I 2 3 4  2 3 4 5  3 4 5 6  4 5 6 7  5 6 t 8  6 7 8 9  7 8 9 10  8 9 - 10 il Continued In a similar manner to magnetic disc, magnetic tape with at least a single record head and N read heads and with proper switch control logic, could provide storage for N frames and control multiple displays as required to provide 3-D TV.
It should be noted that the requirement of relative lateral motion between camera and scene can be eliminated if the transmission bandwidth is allowed to go up. Transmission of 24 channels simultaneously (from 24 stationary TV cameras) would eliminate the need for this relative motion. An alternate would be to transmit 3 channels (say the first picture, twelfth picture and the twenty fourth picture) while using real time computer graphics processing to synthesize the "in-between" views (at the receiver) which were not transmitted. These two approaches would allow "lip-synchronized" 3-D TV of scenes stationary with respect to the TV camera. The penalty, of course, is increased transmission bandwidth.