Multiple resolution helical imaging system and method

A multiple resolution imaging system employs an array of imaging devices each tracing a helical pattern on a recording medium. The imaging devices may be activated sequentially along multiple interlaced helical paths to allow a selectable image resolution with reduced imaging artifacts.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to digital imaging systems and methods, and more particularly to digital imaging systems that apply image information along helical paths.

2. Description of the Related Art

In many digital graphic-arts applications, recording media are imaged by arrays of imaging devices. For example, to circumvent the cumbersome photographic development, plate-mounting and plate-registration operations that typify traditional printing technologies, practitioners have developed electronic alternatives that store the imagewise pattern in digital form and impress the pattern directly onto the plate or recording medium. Plate-imaging devices amenable to computer control include various forms of lasers. For example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,351,617 and 5,385,092 disclose ablative recording systems that use low-power laser discharges to remove, in an imagewise pattern, one or more layers of a lithographic printing blank, thereby creating a ready-to-ink printing member without the need for photographic development. In accordance with those systems, laser output is guided from the diode to the printing surface and focused onto that surface (or, desirably, onto the layer most susceptible to laser ablation, which will generally lie beneath the surface layer). Other systems use laser energy to cause transfer of material from a donor to an acceptor sheet, to record non-ablatively, or as a pointwise alternative to overall exposure through a photomask or negative.

In such systems, the imaging devices are spaced apart by a distance (the “device pitch”) much greater than the resolution—i.e., the distance between image dots (the “dot pitch”) as they appear on the recording medium. The devices are located adjacent to a cylinder, and as the cylinder rotates, the devices each image a series of circumferential rings. That is, each device images through a full rotation of the cylinder, producing a line of the image on the recording medium. The devices are then advanced axially, i.e., indexed, one unit of resolution along the cylinder to image the next circumferential line. Typically the recording medium is in the form of a sheet pinned to the cylinder; the circumferential region along the cylinder between the ends of the recording medium is a gap or “void” segment, and it is when the devices overlie this area that they are advanced.

An alternate mode of imaging follows a spiral or helical pattern. Instead of a series of sequential rings, an imaging device traces a continuous helix over the plate cylinder. In one known arrangement, each device in a linear array is advanced one unit of resolution (i.e., the dot pitch) during each rotation of the cylinder. The devices are each responsible for imaging an adjacent zone, so the end of the helical path followed by one device coincides with the point at which the next device began its helical path. As a result, the final image is a continuous helix. This approach requires no indexing of the imaging devices, and can image over a continuous cylindrical recording medium without a void. Unfortunately, because the zones are adjacent, this type of system produces visible artifacts arising from differences in the imaging characteristics of adjacent devices.

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

3. Brief Summary of the Invention

In accordance with this invention, the regions of the recording medium traversed by adjacent imaging devices are interlaced. By interlacing regions mixed by the different devices, differences in device imaging characteristics are aggregated and thereby rendered less noticeable. For example, susceptibility to periodic imaging artifact such as the Moire effect is reduced. The amount of axial distance traversed by a device during one cylinder rotation (the “helical step pitch”) is the device pitch or a fraction thereof rather than the much smaller dot pitch. As a result, each device traces a wide spiral across the cylinder. The space between turns imaged by the first device is addressed by “downstream” devices whose helices are identical in pitch but offset, so that downstream devices subsequently and successively image the space unaddressed by the upstream devices; that is, the imaging devices are activated and de-activated sequentially rather than simultaneously. A small number of revolutions at the onset (preamble) and the end (postamble) of each imaging cycle occurs during which only some devices are active to initiate and terminate the interlace. So long as the number of devices is not excessive, the extra rotations do not significantly increase overall imaging time relative to the circumferential-ring approach.

In addition, in accordance with the invention, a fixed device pitch can nonetheless be operated to image at different resolutions by varying the helical step pitch.

Accordingly, in a first aspect, an apparatus for imaging a recording medium in accordance with the invention includes a means for supporting a recording medium, an array of imaging devices positioned adjacent to the supporting means, and a means for rotating the supporting means about an axis. The image apparatus further includes a means for axially translating the array along the supporting means and a controller for causing the imaging devices to apply on the recording medium a pattern of dots corresponding to an image. The controller operates the imaging devices so that each device applies dots along a helical path interlacing with the helical paths of the other devices.

In preferred embodiments, the helical paths traversed by the devices are identical in pitch but offset with respect to one another. Each device addresses space on the recording medium that is not addressed by any previously activated device. The pattern of dots applied in a helical pattern may correspond to one of a plurality of selectable image resolutions. The imaging devices are spaced apart by a device pitch and the applied dots are spaced apart by a dot pitch, the device pitch being greater than the dot pitch.

In a second aspect, the invention comprises an imaging method. A recording medium and an array of imaging devices is provided. The recording medium is rotated adjacent to the imaging devices about an axis and the imaging devices apply on the recording medium a pattern of dots corresponding to an image, each of the devices applying dots along a helical path interlacing with the helical paths of the other devices.

It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an imaging system and method which reduces imaging error and artifacts inherent to the periodic aspect of conventional circumferential or helical imaging approaches.

It is an additional object of the invention to provide an imaging system and method capable of operation in multiple resolutions by selective operation of the component imaging devices.

It is a further object of the invention to provide an imaging system and method having reduced manufacturing cost and complexity. The helical imaging approach obviates the need for the rapid, high-impulse movement of the imaging array and the recording medium support during a non-imaging portion of the imaging cycle and the mechanical subsystems necessary to accommodate such movement. Accordingly, no discrete indexing of the imaging array is required and continuous recording is permitted.

The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention disclosed herein, as well as the invention itself, will be more fully understood from the following description of preferred embodiments and claims, when read together with the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Refer first toFIG. 1, which schematically illustrates the basic components of the environment to which the invention may be applied. A recording medium50, such as a lithographic plate blank or other graphic-arts construction, is affixed to a support during the imaging process. In the depicted implementation, that support is a cylinder52, around which recording medium50is wrapped. If desired, cylinder52may be straightforwardly incorporated into the design of a conventional lithographic press, serving as the plate cylinder of the press. Cylinder52is supported in a frame and rotated by a standard electric motor or other conventional means. The angular position of cylinder52is monitored by a shaft encoder associated with a detector55. The optical components of the invention, organized as an array of imaging devices each containing the components indicated at57, may be mounted in a writing head adapted for axial movement. In other embodiments, the optical components of the invention comprise closely spaced and individually operable diode lasers as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,348,358, commonly owned with the present application and hereby incorporated by reference.

Imaging radiation, which strikes recording medium50so as to effect an imagewise scan, originates with one or more pumping laser diodes60. The optical components discussed below concentrate the entire laser output onto recording medium50as a small feature, resulting in high effective power densities. A controller65operates a laser driver67to produce an imaging burst when appropriate points on recording medium50reach opposition to the output slit69of laser60. In general the driver preferably includes a pulse circuit capable of generating at least 100,000 laser-driving pulses/second, with each pulse being relatively short, i.e., on the order of microseconds.

As suggested in the figure, controller65governs operation of all the devices57in the array, and receives data from two sources. The angular position of cylinder52with respect to the laser output is constantly monitored by detector55, which provides signals indicative of that position to controller65. In addition, an image data source (e.g., a computer)70also provides data signals to controller65. The image data provides relative reference points on recording medium50where image spots are to be written. Controller65, therefore, correlates the instantaneous relative positions of laser60and recording medium50(as reported by detector55) with the image data to actuate the appropriate laser drivers at the appropriate times during scan of recording medium50. The driver and control circuitry required to implement this scheme is well-known in the scanner and plotter art; suitable designs are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,385,092 and 5,174,205, both commonly owned with the present application and hereby incorporated by reference.

The output of laser60is delivered to the recording medium50through a fiber-optic cable74. A lens77concentrates the output of laser60to the fiber-optic cable74. Radiation disperses as it exits slit69of laser60, diverging at the slit edges. Generally the dispersion is of primary concern; this dispersion is reduced using a divergence-reduction lens77. A preferred configuration is a completely cylindrical lens, essentially a glass rod segment of proper diameter (as illustrated); however, other optical arrangements, such as lenses having hemispheric cross-sections or which correct both fast and slow axes, can also be straightforwardly implemented.

The highly collimated, low-NA output of the fiber-optic cable74is focused onto the surface (or an appropriate inner layer) of recording medium50by a lens89, which may be a convex lens (as illustrated), a plano-convex lens or other suitable optical arrangement. The laser, laser crystal and optical components are normally carried in a single elongated housing. Recording medium50responds to the imaging radiation emitted by laser60, e.g., through ablation of an imaging layer or by non-ablative transfer of material from a donor to an acceptor sheet.

FIG. 2depicts a known system for imaging a recording medium50affixed to cylindrical recording support52with imaging devices571,572and573(collectively57) located adjacent to cylindrical support52. Typically, imaging devices57are disposed in a single array, and are separated from each other by the device pitch, Pdev. As cylindrical support52rotates, the devices57image through a full rotation of the cylindrical support52, thereby producing a line901,902,903of the image on the recording medium50. Devices57are then indexed along cylindrical support52to image the next circumferential lines. If the devices57are spaced far enough apart, they can each image within a single continuous zone along the cylindrical support52(e.g., Z1, Z2, and Z3as shown) adjacent to the zone served by the next device. Accordingly, the imaging devices57are advanced axially over the zone width in increments equal to the dot pitch, Pdot. The image resolution may also be expressed as the reciprocal of Pdotin dots per millimeter.

FIG. 3depicts a known system for imaging a recording medium utilizing a spiral or helical pattern. Instead of a series of sequential circumferential rings as shown inFIG. 2, imaging devices57trace a continuous helix over the recording medium50. In the illustrated prior art arrangement, the devices57are all advanced one unit of resolution during each rotation of the cylindrical support52. Each device57images within a zone (e.g., Z1, Z2, and Z3, as shown); the region imaged by device571is represented by long dashes, that imaged by device572is represented by a solid line and that imaged by device573by short dashes. Although each zone is shown as extending over only a few passes for clarity, it is evident that the end of the path followed by one device (for example,571) coincides with point at which the next device (for example,572) begins imaging. Consequently, the final image is a continuous helix composed of the separate but contiguous helical contributions of the individual devices. This approach requires no indexing and permits continuous recording.

FIG. 4depicts one embodiment in accordance with this invention, wherein the regions traversed by adjacent devices57are interlaced. Although device57is depicted comprising an array of three imaging devices, device57is not so limited and may comprise any suitable number of devices. Devices57may move along on a lead screw94and guide bar96so as to traverse recording medium50as it rotates. Axial movement of the writing head results from rotation of a motor98, which turns the lead screw94and thereby causes the writing head to move axially along cylinder52.

Recall that the distance between adjacent image devices57is the device pitch Pdev, while the distance between the image dots is the dot pitch Pdot. The amount of axial distance traversed by device57during one cylindrical support52rotation is the helical step pitch (the “HSP”). The HSP is equal to the number of imaging devices multiplied by the dot pitch, Pdot, and generally differs from the device pitch. For example, if the HSP is greater than the device pitch, each device57will trace a wide spiral across the cylinder. The space within the region imaged by the first device (for example,573) is addressed by “downstream” devices (for example572) whose helices are identical in pitch but offset, so that downstream devices subsequently and successively image the space unaddressed by the upstream devices until the image is completed.

Refer now toFIG. 5which schematically depicts an example of interlaced helical imaging wherein the number of devices57is five. As described above, the image resolution can correspond to the dot pitch Pdotand the distance between each imaging device57is given by Pdev. InFIG. 5, imaging of the recording medium50(not shown) is represented by circles (corresponding to individual image dots) rather than a continuous line. In a first imaging100, five dots are simultaneously applied to the recording medium50by the devices of array57(i.e., each device applies one dot), and are therefore separated by a distance corresponding to the device pitch, Pdev. As will be described below, Pdevsatisfies the condition Pdev=(N−1) Pdot. In this example, Pdev=4 Pdot. For a second imaging102, five dots are applied in a similar fashion to the recording medium50at a distance, to the right of the dots imaged in100, defined by the HSP, or the distance traveled by array57over one rotation of the recording medium50. Next, in a third imaging104, five dots are again applied. The process continues sequentially until all image points are addressed as depicted in a final imaging106. It is apparent fromFIG. 5that a preamble area M contains unaddressed dots and is not completely imaged.

Refer now toFIGS. 6A-6C, which illustrate an alternative depiction of the interlaced imaging according to the invention. During the rotation of cylindrical support52at the onset of the imaging cycle (the preamble) and end of the imaging cycle (the postamble) only some devices57are active. (An “imaging cycle” is the number of rotations of cylindrical support52required to complete imaging of the recording medium50.) The region between the preamble and the postamble is the intermediate zone in which all devices57are active. Imaging of the preamble is shown in FIG.6A. As the devices57traverse from left to right along the recording medium50, device573begins to image first, establishing the onset of a corresponding helical path903that will wind continuously around cylindrical support52. The devices572,571begin imaging along respective helical paths902,901when axial movement brings each device into the appropriate onset position. Accordingly, for a number of initial rotations of the cylindrical support52, not all the devices57in the array are active. Similarly, during imaging of the postamble as shown inFIG. 6C, devices57successively cease imaging as they complete their helical paths. So long as the number of devices is not excessive, the extra rotations do not significantly increase overall imaging time relative to the circumferential-ring approach.

It should be understood that the devices57are not constantly firing (i.e., active) as they scan through their helical paths. Rather, these paths merely define the image locations over which the devices pass, and they are activated by controller65(FIG. 1) in accordance with data defining the image to be reproduced on the recording medium50. The result of imaging in accordance with the invention, therefore, is a series of interlaced helical paths that collectively pass over all possible image locations.

In addition, as schematically depicted inFIGS. 7A and 7B, it is found that some systems having a fixed device pitch can nonetheless be operated to image at different resolutions, which depend on the HSP and the pattern in which the devices are activated.FIGS. 7A and 7Bshow an array that contains seven devices57separated from each other by 60 μm. To image at a dot pitch of 10 μm (for a resolution of 100 dots/mm), a HSP of 70 μm is selected. Referring first toFIG. 7A, and given a left-to-right axial advancement of the imaging devices57, the last (i.e., rightmost) two devices576,577are activated first, followed by subsequent devices (575,574,573,572,571) activated one at a time after successive cylinder rotations. When all devices57are active, they trace adjacent helices90, 10 μm apart.

FIG. 7Bshows the same imaging devices57ofFIG. 7Aoperated so as to image at a dot pitch of 20 μm (for a resolution of 50 dots/mm); in this case, a HSP of 140 μm is selected. Once again the last two devices (576,577) are activated first, followed by subsequent devices (575,574,573,572) activated two at a time (except the leftmost device,571, which is activated last and by itself) after successive cylindrical support52rotations. Thus, by doubling the HSP and activating devices in pairs in order to obtain complete coverage of the recording medium50, the resolution may be halved.

For all given configurations of devices57, two resolutions (Pdot1, Pdot2) are available by varying the HSP. A system having a given device spacing Pdevand number N of devices is capable of writing in both the N−1 and N+1 helical modes by varying the HSP to match the resolution. The following equations illustrate:
Pdev=(N−1)Pdot1
and
Pdev=(N+1)Pdot2
(N−1)Pdot1=(N+1)Pdot2
When writing in the N−1 mode, the following equations apply:
Pdot1=Pdev/(N−1)
and
HSP1=NPdot1
When writing in the N+1 mode, the following equations apply:
Pdot2=Pdev/(N+1)
and
HSP2=NPdot2

Moreover, within a particular helical mode (i.e., N+1 or N−1), the resolutions available for a given number of devices57are defined by the condition that the device spacing (i.e., the quantity (N−1)Pdotor (N+1)Pdot, which is itself determined by a highest desired (“primary”) resolution Pdot), when divided by a lower desired (“secondary”) resolution, produces an integer. If it is desired to write at two resolutions where one is double the other, an odd number of devices57is necessary.

For example, suppose there are seven devices57, and the primary resolution (expressed in terms of dot spacing, Pdot) is 10 μm. In the N−1 mode, a 20 μm secondary resolution will also be available, since (7−1)(10)/20=3, an integer. Indeed, a 30 μm secondary resolution will be available as well. Neither of these secondary resolutions would be available with six or eight devices57, since the necessary condition described above would not be satisfied.

It will therefore be seen that we have developed an imaging system and method of reduced manufacturing cost and complexity while offering multiple selectable imaging resolution and reduced imaging artifacts. The terms and expressions employed herein are used as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention, in the use of such terms and expressions, of excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, but it is recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the invention claimed.