Abstract:
In a security alarm system, connections between a local sensor unit or units and a control unit are established by flexible optical light fibre guides, a normal condition of a sensor being indicated by the maintenance of a light signal or signals passing through an associated guide from the sensor unit to the control unit where there is monitoring of at least one parameter of the signal which is dependent on the integrity of the guide.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     This invention relates to security alarm systems intended to provide warning of interference by intruders with items to be protected such as night depositories and safes, or doors and windows. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     Security alarm systems commonly comprise appropriate sensor units associated with items to be protected against intrusion, which may either be some form of switch or circuit maker or breaker responding to interference by intruders with the item to be protected, or some form of transducer responding to deviation outside a predetermined limit of some condition associated with the item to be protected or its environment, e.g. light or movement detectors. In each case, an alarm condition will normally be signified by either the sending or the interruption of an electrical signal. The signals from the sensor unit or units are usually directed to a control unit in the vicinity of the item or items to be protected, and this control unit may contain an alarm responsive to an abnormal sensor unit signal, and/or a signal may be electrically transmitted to a remote point to be monitored for abnormalities. In the latter case, the security alarm signal may be encoded, for example by modulation with a pseudo-random digital sequence, to improve its security. Unfortunately encoding systems providing a high degree of security for electrical signals are relatively expensive and are usually economically impractical for application to the local connections between the sensors and the control units, which connections thus often form the weakest link in an otherwise secure system. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention is concerned with providing a low cost means of improving the security of the links between the sensors and a control unit in an intrusion alarm system. According to the invention, connections between the sensor units and the control unit are established by flexible optical light fibre guides, a signal of predetermined parameters is passed through the guide from each sensor to the control unit to indicate a normal condition of the sensor, and at least one parameter of the signal which is dependent on the integrity of the light guide is monitored at the control unit. 
     It is difficult to tap a signal from an optical fibre without significantly attenuating the signal, because of the necessity for physical coupling to the fibre core, or accurately to sense the amplitude because of the difficulty of establishing a covert tape of accurately known transmission characteristics, or to establish a bridge across a section of fibre to enable the latter to be cut for similar reasons. Moreover, in a multiple fibre guide, where different fibres may carry different signals, these problems are multiplied. Thus if a signal of predetermined amplitude is transmitted from a sensor to the control unit, it is difficult for an intruder trying to circumvent the alarm, and with access only to the light guide, to determine the amplitude of the signal so as to provide a substitute signal. This difficulty is compounded if the signal is a pulse signal of predetermined frequency and duty ratio, or is otherwise modulated in some predetermined manner, and it is further compounded if the light guide is comprised of a bundle of fibres, some of which carry the signal and some of which carry no signal, the non-signal carrying fibres being monitored for the absence of the signal. 
    
    
     SHORT DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
     The accompanying drawing is a partial schematic diagram of a preferred embodiment of an alarm system in accordance with the invention, showing one sensor unit and the relevant parts of a control unit. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     Referring to the drawing, a sensor unit 2 within an enclosure 4, which may for example be a safe, vault, room or other item to be protected from intrusion is connected to a control unit 6 within a remote enclosure 8 by a connection comprising a flexible optical light fibre guide 10 and positive and negative electrical supply lines 12 and 14. The guide 10 consists of a bundle of individual fibres formed of two sub-bundles 16 and 18, the fibres of the sub-bundles being intermingled in the portion of the guide 10 between the enclosures. 
     The intrusion sensor unit 2 comprises the sensor unit proper, shown here as normally open switch 20 connected in series with a diode 22 so as to disable on closing a conventional relaxation oscillator comprising a unijunction transistor 24, a resistor 26 and a capacitor 28 setting a time constant, and resistors 30 and 32 setting the triggering point of the transistor. The output pulses from the first base of the transistor are passed via a resistor 34 to the base of a transistor 36, the collector load of which comprises a light emitting diode (LED) 38 and a current limiting resistor 40. The LED 38 is optically coupled to the fibres of the sub-bundle 16, whilst no light is permitted to enter the fibres of the sub-bundles 18. 
     In the enclosure 8, the fibres of the sub-bundle 16 and 18 are optically coupled to the photo-transistors 42 and 44 respectively. Since no light is permitted to enter the fibres of sub-bundle 18 at the enclosure 4, photo-transistor 44 will normally remain turned off, unless some attempt to interfere with the guide 10 or to introduce a substitute signal therein results in light entering fibres of the sub-bundle, in which case the transistor will turn on. 
     The collector of photo-transistor 42 is connected to the positive line 12 via a variable resistor 46 and to a capacitor 48 via a resistor 50. When the transistor is turned off, i.e. the LED 38 is off and therefore no light is passing through the sub-bundle 16, the capacitor 48 will charge through resistors 46 and 50. When the LED 38 is on, the capacitor will discharge through the resistor 50 and the resistance of the transistor 42, which will depend on the intensity of the light transmitted through the sub-bundle 16. As long as this intensity and the duration and frequency of the pulses from the relaxation oscillator remain unchanged, the capacitor will charge to an equilibrium potential which may be set to about half the line potential by means of the variable resistor 46. This equilibrium potential is applied to the inverting and non-inverting inputs respectively of two comparators 52, 54, the other inputs of which are potentials taken from a potentiometer formed by resistors 56, 58, 60 selected so that the reference potentials are respectively a predetermined margin above and below the equilibrium potential. Any excessive deviation of the potential on capacitor 48 will thus cause one of the comparator outputs to go low. The comparator outputs are ORed by diodes 62, 64 to a common output line 66 connected to the line 12 by a pull-up resistor 68. Thus any excessive deviation in the frequency, pulse length or amplitude of the signal reaching the transistor 42 will cause the output line 66 to go low, as will conduction of the photo-transistor 44 which is connected across the capacitor 48. 
     Other similar sensor units may be monitored on the output line 66, circuits similar to that already described being ORed thereto by further pairs of diodes 62, 64 as shown. 
     It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the above embodiment is susceptible to wide range of modification. Thus the switch 20 may be replaced by any normally off or normally on device responsive to some threshold condition in the item being monitored for intrusion and connected so as to disable the oscillator in the event of an abnormal condition being detected. A wide range of different types of oscillators or signal generators may be utilized to modulate the output of the LED 38, and the unit 2 could have an independent power supply, thus dispensing with the need for the lines 12 and 14. If a lesser degree of security is tolerable, a direct current could be applied to the LED so that only the amplitude of the light signal would be monitored, the sub-bundle 18 could be eliminated, and/or the sub-bundle 16 reduced to a single fibre. As in the case of the unit 2, the construction of the unit 6 may also be varied, provided that the function is maintained of monitoring and responding to abnormal deviation of some parameter of the optical signal which is dependent on the integrity of the light guide 10. 
     Instead of incorporating an oscillator in the unit 2, it could be incorporated in the control unit 6, and a sub-bundle of fibres in the guide 10 used to transmit the modulating signal to the unit 2 by means of suitable optoelectronic transmitting and receiving devices such as a LED and phototransistor. The received signal would then be utilised to modulate the LED 38, either with or without inversion or other modification.