How Devices Detect Touch Using Heat Signatures
This patent describes a system that uses a thermal camera to detect when two objects, like a finger and a screen, touch by looking for a specific temperature change at their contact point.
Patent Number
US 20210117042
Status
Active
Filing Date
December 23, 2020
Grant Date
—
Expiration
December 23, 2040
Claims
25
Assignee
Apple
Inventors
Daniel Kurz
Citations
1 forward · 3 backward
What it covers
The patent describes a system that uses a thermal camera to detect when a "first object" (like a finger) touches a "second object" (like a display). The system first takes a thermal image of both objects and determines their individual temperatures. A touch is detected when the system finds pixels in the thermal image that show a "third temperature" exactly where the two objects meet (Claim 31). This "third temperature" is different from the individual object temperatures, indicating contact. For example, if a warm hand touches a cooler display, the system would identify a distinct warm spot on the display in the thermal image. The system then uses this detected touch and its position on the display to provide user input, such as interacting with an application (Claim 31).
What it doesn't cover
- —Does not cover touch detection methods that do not rely on thermal imaging.
- —Does not cover systems that detect touch without identifying a distinct "third temperature" at the contact point (Claim 31).
- —Does not cover touch detection where the two objects have the same temperature, as the method relies on a temperature difference.
- —Does not cover touchscreens that use electrical capacitance, pressure sensors, or optical sensors to detect contact.
- —Does not cover systems that only detect the presence of an object without specifically identifying a touch based on a temperature change.
The clever bit
The novelty lies in using thermal imaging to specifically identify a touch event by detecting a distinct "third temperature" at the precise point of contact between two objects that have different initial temperatures. This goes beyond just seeing heat; it's about identifying the interaction through a localized temperature anomaly.
Why it matters
This technology could enable new ways for users to interact with devices, especially in environments where traditional touchscreens might be difficult to use, like with gloves or through certain materials. It could also provide more precise or nuanced input by detecting the specific area of contact and even aspects like which part of a user's hand is touching, as suggested by Claim 40.
Real-world examples
- 1.Future augmented reality (AR) displays
- 2.Interactive surfaces in industrial or medical settings
- 3.Devices requiring touch input while wearing gloves
- 4.Advanced human-computer interfaces for specialized tasks
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