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Wikipedia

Holography

Holography is a technique that enables a wavefront to be recorded and later reconstructed. It is best known as a method of generating three-dimensional images, and has a wide range of other uses, including data storage, microscopy, and interferometry. In principle, it is possible to make a hologram for any type of wave.

Two photographs of a single hologram taken from different viewpoints

A hologram is a recording of an interference pattern that can reproduce a 3D light field using diffraction. In general usage, a hologram is a recording of any type of wavefront in the form of an interference pattern. It can be created by capturing light from a real scene, or it can be generated by a computer, in which case it is known as a computer-generated hologram, which can show virtual objects or scenes. Optical holography needs a laser light to record the light field. The reproduced light field can generate an image that has the depth and parallax of the original scene.[1] A hologram is usually unintelligible when viewed under diffuse ambient light. When suitably lit, the interference pattern diffracts the light into an accurate reproduction of the original light field, and the objects that were in it exhibit visual depth cues such as parallax and perspective that change realistically with the different angles of viewing. That is, the view of the image from different angles shows the subject viewed from similar angles.

A hologram is traditionally generated by overlaying a second wavefront, known as the reference beam, onto a wavefront of interest. This generates an interference pattern, which is then captured on a physical medium. When the recorded interference pattern is later illuminated by the second wavefront, it is diffracted to recreate the original wavefront.[2] The 3D image from a hologram can often be viewed with non-laser light. However, in common practice, major image quality compromises are made to remove the need for laser illumination to view the hologram.

A computer-generated hologram is created by digitally modeling and combining two wavefronts to generate an interference pattern image. This image can then be printed onto a mask or film and illuminated with an appropriate light source to reconstruct the desired wavefront.[2] Alternatively, the interference pattern image can be directly displayed on a dynamic holographic display.[3]

Holographic portraiture often resorts to a non-holographic intermediate imaging procedure, to avoid the dangerous high-powered pulsed lasers which would be needed to optically "freeze" moving subjects as perfectly as the extremely motion-intolerant holographic recording process requires. Early holography required high-power and expensive lasers. Currently, mass-produced low-cost laser diodes, such as those found on DVD recorders and used in other common applications, can be used to make holograms. They have made holography much more accessible to low-budget researchers, artists, and dedicated hobbyists.

Most holograms produced are of static objects, but systems for displaying changing scenes on dynamic holographic displays are now being developed.[4][5]

The word holography comes from the Greek words ὅλος (holos; "whole") and γραφή (graphē; "writing" or "drawing").

History edit

Introduction to Holography (1972 educational film)

The Hungarian-British physicist Dennis Gabor invented holography in 1948 while he was looking for a way to improve image resolution in electron microscopes.[6][7][8] Gabor's work was built on pioneering work in the field of X-ray microscopy by other scientists including Mieczysław Wolfke in 1920 and William Lawrence Bragg in 1939.[9] The formulation of holography was an unexpected result of Gabor's research into improving electron microscopes at the British Thomson-Houston Company (BTH) in Rugby, England, and the company filed a patent in December 1947 (patent GB685286). The technique as originally invented is still used in electron microscopy, where it is known as electron holography. Gabor was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971 "for his invention and development of the holographic method".[10]

 
Horizontal symmetric text, by Dieter Jung

Optical holography did not really advance until the development of the laser in 1960. The development of the laser enabled the first practical optical holograms that recorded 3D objects to be made in 1962 by Yuri Denisyuk in the Soviet Union[11] and by Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks at the University of Michigan, US.[12]

Early optical holograms used silver halide photographic emulsions as the recording medium. They were not very efficient as the produced diffraction grating absorbed much of the incident light. Various methods of converting the variation in transmission to a variation in refractive index (known as "bleaching") were developed which enabled much more efficient holograms to be produced.[13][14][15]

A major advance in the field of holography was made by Stephen Benton, who invented a way to create holograms that can be viewed with natural light instead of lasers. These are called rainbow holograms.[8]

Basics of holography edit

 
Recording a hologram
 
Reconstructing a hologram
 
This is a photograph of a small part of an unbleached transmission hologram viewed through a microscope. The hologram recorded an image of a toy van and car. It is no more possible to discern the subject of the hologram from this pattern than it is to identify what music has been recorded by looking at a CD surface. The holographic information is recorded by the speckle pattern.

Holography is a technique for recording and reconstructing light fields.[16]: Section 1  A light field is generally the result of a light source scattered off objects. Holography can be thought of as somewhat similar to sound recording, whereby a sound field created by vibrating matter like musical instruments or vocal cords, is encoded in such a way that it can be reproduced later, without the presence of the original vibrating matter.[17] However, it is even more similar to Ambisonic sound recording in which any listening angle of a sound field can be reproduced in the reproduction.

Laser edit

In laser holography, the hologram is recorded using a source of laser light, which is very pure in its color and orderly in its composition. Various setups may be used, and several types of holograms can be made, but all involve the interaction of light coming from different directions and producing a microscopic interference pattern which a plate, film, or other medium photographically records.

In one common arrangement, the laser beam is split into two, one known as the object beam and the other as the reference beam. The object beam is expanded by passing it through a lens and used to illuminate the subject. The recording medium is located where this light, after being reflected or scattered by the subject, will strike it. The edges of the medium will ultimately serve as a window through which the subject is seen, so its location is chosen with that in mind. The reference beam is expanded and made to shine directly on the medium, where it interacts with the light coming from the subject to create the desired interference pattern.

Like conventional photography, holography requires an appropriate exposure time to correctly affect the recording medium. Unlike conventional photography, during the exposure the light source, the optical elements, the recording medium, and the subject must all remain motionless relative to each other, to within about a quarter of the wavelength of the light, or the interference pattern will be blurred and the hologram spoiled. With living subjects and some unstable materials, that is only possible if a very intense and extremely brief pulse of laser light is used, a hazardous procedure which is rarely done outside of scientific and industrial laboratory settings. Exposures lasting several seconds to several minutes, using a much lower-powered continuously operating laser, are typical.

Apparatus edit

A hologram can be made by shining part of the light beam directly into the recording medium, and the other part onto the object in such a way that some of the scattered light falls onto the recording medium. A more flexible arrangement for recording a hologram requires the laser beam to be aimed through a series of elements that change it in different ways. The first element is a beam splitter that divides the beam into two identical beams, each aimed in different directions:

  • One beam (known as the 'illumination' or 'object beam') is spread using lenses and directed onto the scene using mirrors. Some of the light scattered (reflected) from the scene then falls onto the recording medium.
  • The second beam (known as the 'reference beam') is also spread through the use of lenses, but is directed so that it does not come in contact with the scene, and instead travels directly onto the recording medium.

Several different materials can be used as the recording medium. One of the most common is a film very similar to photographic film (silver halide photographic emulsion), but with much smaller light-reactive grains (preferably with diameters less than 20 nm), making it capable of the much higher resolution that holograms require. A layer of this recording medium (e.g., silver halide) is attached to a transparent substrate, which is commonly glass, but may also be plastic.

Process edit

When the two laser beams reach the recording medium, their light waves intersect and interfere with each other. It is this interference pattern that is imprinted on the recording medium. The pattern itself is seemingly random, as it represents the way in which the scene's light interfered with the original light source – but not the original light source itself. The interference pattern can be considered an encoded version of the scene, requiring a particular key – the original light source – in order to view its contents.

This missing key is provided later by shining a laser, identical to the one used to record the hologram, onto the developed film. When this beam illuminates the hologram, it is diffracted by the hologram's surface pattern. This produces a light field identical to the one originally produced by the scene and scattered onto the hologram.

Comparison with photography edit

Holography may be better understood via an examination of its differences from ordinary photography:

  • A hologram represents a recording of information regarding the light that came from the original scene as scattered in a range of directions rather than from only one direction, as in a photograph. This allows the scene to be viewed from a range of different angles, as if it were still present.
  • A photograph can be recorded using normal light sources (sunlight or electric lighting) whereas a laser is required to record a hologram.
  • A lens is required in photography to record the image, whereas in holography, the light from the object is scattered directly onto the recording medium.
  • A holographic recording requires a second light beam (the reference beam) to be directed onto the recording medium.
  • A photograph can be viewed in a wide range of lighting conditions, whereas holograms can only be viewed with very specific forms of illumination.
  • When a photograph is cut in half, each piece shows half of the scene. When a hologram is cut in half, the whole scene can still be seen in each piece. This is because, whereas each point in a photograph only represents light scattered from a single point in the scene, each point on a holographic recording includes information about light scattered from every point in the scene. It can be thought of as viewing a street outside a house through a 120 cm × 120 cm (4 ft × 4 ft) window, then through a 60 cm × 120 cm (2 ft × 4 ft) window. One can see all of the same things through the smaller window (by moving the head to change the viewing angle), but the viewer can see more at once through the 120 cm (4 ft) window.
  • A photographic stereogram is a two-dimensional representation that can produce a three-dimensional effect but only from one point of view, whereas the reproduced viewing range of a hologram adds many more depth perception cues that were present in the original scene. These cues are recognized by the human brain and translated into the same perception of a three-dimensional image as when the original scene might have been viewed.
  • A photograph clearly maps out the light field of the original scene. The developed hologram's surface consists of a very fine, seemingly random pattern, which appears to bear no relationship to the scene it recorded.

Physics of holography edit

For a better understanding of the process, it is necessary to understand interference and diffraction. Interference occurs when one or more wavefronts are superimposed. Diffraction occurs when a wavefront encounters an object. The process of producing a holographic reconstruction is explained below purely in terms of interference and diffraction. It is somewhat simplified but is accurate enough to give an understanding of how the holographic process works.

For those unfamiliar with these concepts, it is worthwhile to read those articles before reading further in this article.

Plane wavefronts edit

A diffraction grating is a structure with a repeating pattern. A simple example is a metal plate with slits cut at regular intervals. A light wave that is incident on a grating is split into several waves; the direction of these diffracted waves is determined by the grating spacing and the wavelength of the light.

A simple hologram can be made by superimposing two plane waves from the same light source on a holographic recording medium. The two waves interfere, giving a straight-line fringe pattern whose intensity varies sinusoidally across the medium. The spacing of the fringe pattern is determined by the angle between the two waves, and by the wavelength of the light.

The recorded light pattern is a diffraction grating. When it is illuminated by only one of the waves used to create it, it can be shown that one of the diffracted waves emerges at the same angle at which the second wave was originally incident, so that the second wave has been 'reconstructed'. Thus, the recorded light pattern is a holographic recording as defined above.

Point sources edit

 
Sinusoidal zone plate

If the recording medium is illuminated with a point source and a normally incident plane wave, the resulting pattern is a sinusoidal zone plate, which acts as a negative Fresnel lens whose focal length is equal to the separation of the point source and the recording plane.

When a plane wave-front illuminates a negative lens, it is expanded into a wave that appears to diverge from the focal point of the lens. Thus, when the recorded pattern is illuminated with the original plane wave, some of the light is diffracted into a diverging beam equivalent to the original spherical wave; a holographic recording of the point source has been created.

When the plane wave is incident at a non-normal angle at the time of recording, the pattern formed is more complex, but still acts as a negative lens if it is illuminated at the original angle.

Complex objects edit

To record a hologram of a complex object, a laser beam is first split into two beams of light. One beam illuminates the object, which then scatters light onto the recording medium. According to diffraction theory, each point in the object acts as a point source of light so the recording medium can be considered to be illuminated by a set of point sources located at varying distances from the medium.

The second (reference) beam illuminates the recording medium directly. Each point source wave interferes with the reference beam, giving rise to its own sinusoidal zone plate in the recording medium. The resulting pattern is the sum of all these 'zone plates', which combine to produce a random (speckle) pattern as in the photograph above.

When the hologram is illuminated by the original reference beam, each of the individual zone plates reconstructs the object wave that produced it, and these individual wavefronts are combined to reconstruct the whole of the object beam. The viewer perceives a wavefront that is identical with the wavefront scattered from the object onto the recording medium, so that it appears that the object is still in place even if it has been removed.

Applications edit

Art edit

Early on, artists saw the potential of holography as a medium and gained access to science laboratories to create their work. Holographic art is often the result of collaborations between scientists and artists, although some holographers would regard themselves as both an artist and a scientist.

Salvador Dalí claimed to have been the first to employ holography artistically. He was certainly the first and best-known surrealist to do so, but the 1972 New York exhibit of Dalí holograms had been preceded by the holographic art exhibition that was held at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan in 1968 and by the one at the Finch College gallery in New York in 1970, which attracted national media attention.[18] In Great Britain, Margaret Benyon began using holography as an artistic medium in the late 1960s and had a solo exhibition at the University of Nottingham art gallery in 1969.[19] This was followed in 1970 by a solo show at the Lisson Gallery in London, which was billed as the "first London expo of holograms and stereoscopic paintings".[20]

During the 1970s, a number of art studios and schools were established, each with their particular approach to holography. Notably, there was the San Francisco School of Holography established by Lloyd Cross, The Museum of Holography in New York founded by Rosemary (Posy) H. Jackson, the Royal College of Art in London and the Lake Forest College Symposiums organised by Tung Jeong.[21] None of these studios still exist; however, there is the Center for the Holographic Arts in New York[22] and the HOLOcenter in Seoul, which offers artists a place to create and exhibit work.

During the 1980s, many artists who worked with holography helped the diffusion of this so-called "new medium" in the art world, such as Harriet Casdin-Silver of the United States, Dieter Jung of Germany, and Moysés Baumstein of Brazil, each one searching for a proper "language" to use with the three-dimensional work, avoiding the simple holographic reproduction of a sculpture or object. For instance, in Brazil, many concrete poets (Augusto de Campos, Décio Pignatari, Julio Plaza and José Wagner Garcia, associated with Moysés Baumstein) found in holography a way to express themselves and to renew Concrete Poetry.

A small but active group of artists still integrate holographic elements into their work.[23] Some are associated with novel holographic techniques; for example, artist Matt Brand[24] employed computational mirror design to eliminate image distortion from specular holography.

The MIT Museum[25] and Jonathan Ross[26] both have extensive collections of holography and on-line catalogues of art holograms.

Data storage edit

Holographic data storage is a technique that can store information at high density inside crystals or photopolymers. The ability to store large amounts of information in some kind of medium is of great importance, as many electronic products incorporate storage devices. As current storage techniques such as Blu-ray Disc reach the limit of possible data density (due to the diffraction-limited size of the writing beams), holographic storage has the potential to become the next generation of popular storage media. The advantage of this type of data storage is that the volume of the recording media is used instead of just the surface. Currently available SLMs can produce about 1000 different images a second at 1024×1024-bit resolution which would result in about one-gigabit-per-second writing speed.[27]

In 2005, companies such as Optware and Maxell produced a 120 mm disc that uses a holographic layer to store data to a potential 3.9 TB, a format called Holographic Versatile Disc. As of September 2014, no commercial product has been released.

Another company, InPhase Technologies, was developing a competing format, but went bankrupt in 2011 and all its assets were sold to Akonia Holographics, LLC.

While many holographic data storage models have used "page-based" storage, where each recorded hologram holds a large amount of data, more recent research into using submicrometre-sized "microholograms" has resulted in several potential 3D optical data storage solutions. While this approach to data storage can not attain the high data rates of page-based storage, the tolerances, technological hurdles, and cost of producing a commercial product are significantly lower.

Dynamic holography edit

In static holography, recording, developing and reconstructing occur sequentially, and a permanent hologram is produced.

There also exist holographic materials that do not need the developing process and can record a hologram in a very short time. This allows one to use holography to perform some simple operations in an all-optical way. Examples of applications of such real-time holograms include phase-conjugate mirrors ("time-reversal" of light), optical cache memories, image processing (pattern recognition of time-varying images), and optical computing.

The amount of processed information can be very high (terabits/s), since the operation is performed in parallel on a whole image. This compensates for the fact that the recording time, which is in the order of a microsecond, is still very long compared to the processing time of an electronic computer. The optical processing performed by a dynamic hologram is also much less flexible than electronic processing. On one side, one has to perform the operation always on the whole image, and on the other side, the operation a hologram can perform is basically either a multiplication or a phase conjugation. In optics, addition and Fourier transform are already easily performed in linear materials, the latter simply by a lens. This enables some applications, such as a device that compares images in an optical way.[28]

The search for novel nonlinear optical materials for dynamic holography is an active area of research. The most common materials are photorefractive crystals, but in semiconductors or semiconductor heterostructures (such as quantum wells), atomic vapors and gases, plasmas and even liquids, it was possible to generate holograms.

A particularly promising application is optical phase conjugation. It allows the removal of the wavefront distortions a light beam receives when passing through an aberrating medium, by sending it back through the same aberrating medium with a conjugated phase. This is useful, for example, in free-space optical communications to compensate for atmospheric turbulence (the phenomenon that gives rise to the twinkling of starlight).

Hobbyist use edit

 
Peace Within Reach, a Denisyuk DCG hologram by amateur Dave Battin

Since the beginning of holography, many holographers have explored its uses and displayed them to the public.

In 1971, Lloyd Cross opened the San Francisco School of Holography and taught amateurs how to make holograms using only a small (typically 5 mW) helium-neon laser and inexpensive home-made equipment. Holography had been supposed to require a very expensive metal optical table set-up to lock all the involved elements down in place and damp any vibrations that could blur the interference fringes and ruin the hologram. Cross's home-brew alternative was a sandbox made of a cinder block retaining wall on a plywood base, supported on stacks of old tires to isolate it from ground vibrations, and filled with sand that had been washed to remove dust. The laser was securely mounted atop the cinder block wall. The mirrors and simple lenses needed for directing, splitting and expanding the laser beam were affixed to short lengths of PVC pipe, which were stuck into the sand at the desired locations. The subject and the photographic plate holder were similarly supported within the sandbox. The holographer turned off the room light, blocked the laser beam near its source using a small relay-controlled shutter, loaded a plate into the holder in the dark, left the room, waited a few minutes to let everything settle, then made the exposure by remotely operating the laser shutter.

In 1979, Jason Sapan opened the Holographic Studios in New York City. Since then, they have been involved in the production of many holographs for many artists as well as companies.[29] Sapan has been described as the "last professional holographer of New York".

Many of these holographers would go on to produce art holograms. In 1983, Fred Unterseher, a co-founder of the San Francisco School of Holography and a well-known holographic artist, published the Holography Handbook, an easy-to-read guide to making holograms at home. This brought in a new wave of holographers and provided simple methods for using the then-available AGFA silver halide recording materials.

In 2000, Frank DeFreitas published the Shoebox Holography Book and introduced the use of inexpensive laser pointers to countless hobbyists. For many years, it had been assumed that certain characteristics of semiconductor laser diodes made them virtually useless for creating holograms, but when they were eventually put to the test of practical experiment, it was found that not only was this untrue, but that some actually provided a coherence length much greater than that of traditional helium-neon gas lasers. This was a very important development for amateurs, as the price of red laser diodes had dropped from hundreds of dollars in the early 1980s to about $5 after they entered the mass market as a component of DVD players in the late 1990s. Now, there are thousands of amateur holographers worldwide.

By late 2000, holography kits with inexpensive laser pointer diodes entered the mainstream consumer market. These kits enabled students, teachers, and hobbyists to make several kinds of holograms without specialized equipment, and became popular gift items by 2005.[30] The introduction of holography kits with self-developing plates in 2003 made it possible for hobbyists to create holograms without the bother of wet chemical processing.[31]

In 2006, a large number of surplus holography-quality green lasers (Coherent C315) became available and put dichromated gelatin (DCG) holography within the reach of the amateur holographer. The holography community was surprised at the amazing sensitivity of DCG to green light. It had been assumed that this sensitivity would be uselessly slight or non-existent. Jeff Blyth responded with the G307 formulation of DCG to increase the speed and sensitivity to these new lasers.[32]

Kodak and Agfa, the former major suppliers of holography-quality silver halide plates and films, are no longer in the market. While other manufacturers have helped fill the void, many amateurs are now making their own materials. The favorite formulations are dichromated gelatin, Methylene-Blue-sensitised dichromated gelatin, and diffusion method silver halide preparations. Jeff Blyth has published very accurate methods for making these in a small lab or garage.[33]

A small group of amateurs are even constructing their own pulsed lasers to make holograms of living subjects and other unsteady or moving objects.[34]

Holographic interferometry edit

Holographic interferometry (HI) is a technique that enables static and dynamic displacements of objects with optically rough surfaces to be measured to optical interferometric precision (i.e. to fractions of a wavelength of light).[35][36] It can also be used to detect optical-path-length variations in transparent media, which enables, for example, fluid flow to be visualized and analyzed. It can also be used to generate contours representing the form of the surface or the isodose regions in radiation dosimetry.[37]

It has been widely used to measure stress, strain, and vibration in engineering structures.

Interferometric microscopy edit

The hologram keeps the information on the amplitude and phase of the field. Several holograms may keep information about the same distribution of light, emitted to various directions. The numerical analysis of such holograms allows one to emulate large numerical aperture, which, in turn, enables enhancement of the resolution of optical microscopy. The corresponding technique is called interferometric microscopy. Recent achievements of interferometric microscopy allow one to approach the quarter-wavelength limit of resolution.[38]

Sensors or biosensors edit

The hologram is made with a modified material that interacts with certain molecules generating a change in the fringe periodicity or refractive index, therefore, the color of the holographic reflection.[39][40]

Security edit

 
Identigram as a security element in a German identity card
 
Dove hologram used on some credit cards

Holograms are commonly used for security, as they are replicated from a master hologram that requires expensive, specialized and technologically advanced equipment, and are thus difficult to forge. They are used widely in many currencies, such as the Brazilian 20, 50, and 100-reais notes; British 5, 10, 20 and 50-pound notes; South Korean 5000, 10,000, and 50,000-won notes; Japanese 5000 and 10,000 yen notes, Indian 50, 100, 500, and 2000 rupee notes; and all the currently-circulating banknotes of the Canadian dollar, Croatian kuna, Danish krone, and Euro. They can also be found in credit and bank cards as well as passports, ID cards, books, food packaging, DVDs, and sports equipment. Such holograms come in a variety of forms, from adhesive strips that are laminated on packaging for fast-moving consumer goods to holographic tags on electronic products. They often contain textual or pictorial elements to protect identities and separate genuine articles from counterfeits.

Holographic scanners are in use in post offices, larger shipping firms, and automated conveyor systems to determine the three-dimensional size of a package. They are often used in tandem with checkweighers to allow automated pre-packing of given volumes, such as a truck or pallet for bulk shipment of goods. Holograms produced in elastomers can be used as stress-strain reporters due to its elasticity and compressibility, the pressure and force applied are correlated to the reflected wavelength, therefore its color.[41] Holography technique can also be effectively used for radiation dosimetry.[42][43]

High security registration plates edit

High-security holograms can be used on license plates for vehicles such as cars and motorcycles. As of April 2019, holographic license plates are required on vehicles in parts of India to aid in identification and security, especially in cases of car theft. Such number plates hold electronic data of vehicles, and have a unique ID number and a sticker to indicate authenticity.[44]

Holography using other types of waves edit

In principle, it is possible to make a hologram for any wave.

Electron holography is the application of holography techniques to electron waves rather than light waves. Electron holography was invented by Dennis Gabor to improve the resolution and avoid the aberrations of the transmission electron microscope. Today it is commonly used to study electric and magnetic fields in thin films, as magnetic and electric fields can shift the phase of the interfering wave passing through the sample.[45] The principle of electron holography can also be applied to interference lithography.[46]

Acoustic holography enables sound maps of an object to be generated. Measurements of the acoustic field are made at many points close to the object. These measurements are digitally processed to produce the "images" of the object.[47]

Atomic holography has evolved out of the development of the basic elements of atom optics. With the Fresnel diffraction lens and atomic mirrors atomic holography follows a natural step in the development of the physics (and applications) of atomic beams. Recent developments including atomic mirrors and especially ridged mirrors have provided the tools necessary for the creation of atomic holograms,[48] although such holograms have not yet been commercialized.

Neutron beam holography has been used to see the inside of solid objects.[49]

Holograms with x-rays are generated by using synchrotrons or x-ray free-electron lasers as radiation sources and pixelated detectors such as CCDs as recording medium.[50] The reconstruction is then retrieved via computation. Due to the shorter wavelength of x-rays compared to visible light, this approach allows imaging objects with higher spatial resolution.[51] As free-electron lasers can provide ultrashort and x-ray pulses in the range of femtoseconds which are intense and coherent, x-ray holography has been used to capture ultrafast dynamic processes.[52][53][54]

False holograms edit

 
A Pepper's ghost illusion made from a clear plastic frustum
Shows making using of projected images are erroneously marketed as "holographic"

There are many optical effects that are falsely confused with holography, such as the effects produced by lenticular printing, the Pepper's ghost illusion (or modern variants such as the Musion Eyeliner), tomography and volumetric displays.[55][56] Such illusions have been called "fauxlography".[57][58]

The Pepper's ghost technique, being the easiest to implement of these methods, is most prevalent in 3D displays that claim to be (or are referred to as) "holographic". While the original illusion, used in theater, involved actual physical objects and persons, located offstage, modern variants replace the source object with a digital screen, which displays imagery generated with 3D computer graphics to provide the necessary depth cues. The reflection, which seems to float mid-air, is still flat however, thus less realistic than if an actual 3D object was being reflected.

Examples of this digital version of Pepper's ghost illusion include the Gorillaz performances in the 2005 MTV Europe Music Awards and the 48th Grammy Awards; and Tupac Shakur's virtual performance at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2012, rapping alongside Snoop Dogg during his set with Dr. Dre.[59] Digital avatars of the Swedish supergroup ABBA were displayed on stage in May 2022.[60] The ABBA performance used technology that was an updated version of Pepper's Ghost created by Industrial Light & Magic.[61] American rock group KISS unveiled similar digital avatars in December 2023 to tour in their place at the conclusion of the End of the Road World Tour using the same Pepper's Ghost technology as the ABBA avatars.[62]

An even simpler illusion can be created by rear-projecting realistic images into semi-transparent screens. The rear projection is necessary because otherwise the semi-transparency of the screen would allow the background to be illuminated by the projection, which would break the illusion.

Crypton Future Media, a music software company that produced Hatsune Miku,[63] one of many Vocaloid singing synthesizer applications, has produced concerts that have Miku, along with other Crypton Vocaloids, performing on stage as "holographic" characters. These concerts use rear projection onto a semi-transparent DILAD screen[64][65] to achieve its "holographic" effect.[66][67]

In 2011, in Beijing, apparel company Burberry produced the "Burberry Prorsum Autumn/Winter 2011 Hologram Runway Show", which included life size 2-D projections of models. The company's own video[68] shows several centered and off-center shots of the main 2-dimensional projection screen, the latter revealing the flatness of the virtual models. The claim that holography was used was reported as fact in the trade media.[69]

In Madrid, on 10 April 2015, a public visual presentation called "Hologramas por la Libertad" (Holograms for Liberty), featuring a ghostly virtual crowd of demonstrators, was used to protest a new Spanish law that prohibits citizens from demonstrating in public places. Although widely called a "hologram protest" in news reports,[70] no actual holography was involved – it was yet another technologically updated variant of the Pepper's ghost illusion.

Holography is distinct from specular holography which is a technique for making three-dimensional images by controlling the motion of specularities on a two-dimensional surface.[71] It works by reflectively or refractively manipulating bundles of light rays, not by using interference and diffraction.

Tactile holograms edit

In fiction edit

Holography has been widely referred to in movies, novels, and TV, usually in science fiction, starting in the late 1970s.[72] Science fiction writers absorbed the urban legends surrounding holography that had been spread by overly-enthusiastic scientists and entrepreneurs trying to market the idea.[72] This had the effect of giving the public overly high expectations of the capability of holography, due to the unrealistic depictions of it in most fiction, where they are fully three-dimensional computer projections that are sometimes tactile through the use of force fields.[72] Examples of this type of depiction include the hologram of Princess Leia in Star Wars, Arnold Rimmer from Red Dwarf, who was later converted to "hard light" to make him solid, and the Holodeck and Emergency Medical Hologram from Star Trek.[72]

Holography has served as an inspiration for many video games with science fiction elements. In many titles, fictional holographic technology has been used to reflect real life misrepresentations of potential military use of holograms, such as the "mirage tanks" in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 that can disguise themselves as trees.[73] Player characters are able to use holographic decoys in games such as Halo: Reach and Crysis 2 to confuse and distract the enemy.[73] Starcraft ghost agent Nova has access to "holo decoy" as one of her three primary abilities in Heroes of the Storm.[74]

Fictional depictions of holograms have, however, inspired technological advances in other fields, such as augmented reality, that promise to fulfill the fictional depictions of holograms by other means.[75]

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Hariharan P, 1996, Optical Holography, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-43965-5
  • Hariharan P, 2002, Basics of Holography, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-00200-1
  • Lipson A., Lipson SG, Lipson H, Optical Physics, 2011, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-49345-1

Further reading edit

  • Lasers and holography: an introduction to coherent optics W. E. Kock, Dover Publications (1981), ISBN 978-0-486-24041-1
  • Principles of holography H. M. Smith, Wiley (1976), ISBN 978-0-471-80341-6
  • G. Berger et al., Digital Data Storage in a phase-encoded holographic memory system: data quality and security, Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 4988, pp. 104–111 (2003)
  • Holographic Visions: A History of New Science Sean F. Johnston, Oxford University Press (2006), ISBN 0-19-857122-4
  • Saxby, Graham (2003). Practical Holography, Third Edition. Taylor and Francis. ISBN 978-0-7503-0912-7.
  • Three-Dimensional Imaging Techniques Takanori Okoshi, Atara Press (2011), ISBN 978-0-9822251-4-1
  • Holographic Microscopy of Phase Microscopic Objects: Theory and Practice Tatyana Tishko, Tishko Dmitry, Titar Vladimir, World Scientific (2010), ISBN 978-981-4289-54-2
  • Richardson, Martin J.; Wiltshire, John D. (2017). Richardson, Martin J.; Wiltshire, John D. (eds.). The Hologram: Principles and Techniques. Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781119088929. ISBN 9781119088905. OCLC 1000385946.

External links edit

  • "", 30 September 2004, Nobelprize.org
    • "Holography, 1948-1971 Nobel Lecture", 11 December 1971, by Dennis Gabor
  • "How Holograms Work", How Stuff Works, by Tracy V. Wilson, 30 August 2023
  • "Holography" by The Strange Theory of Light, QED
  • "Making Real Holograms!" at YouTube by The Thought Emporium, 19 November 2020

holography, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, pepper, ghost, hologram, redirects, here, other, uses, hologram, disambiguation, technique, that, enables, wavefront, recorded, later, reconstructed, best, known, method, generating, three, dimensional, . For other uses see Holography disambiguation Not to be confused with Pepper s ghost Hologram redirects here For other uses see Hologram disambiguation Holography is a technique that enables a wavefront to be recorded and later reconstructed It is best known as a method of generating three dimensional images and has a wide range of other uses including data storage microscopy and interferometry In principle it is possible to make a hologram for any type of wave Two photographs of a single hologram taken from different viewpointsA hologram is a recording of an interference pattern that can reproduce a 3D light field using diffraction In general usage a hologram is a recording of any type of wavefront in the form of an interference pattern It can be created by capturing light from a real scene or it can be generated by a computer in which case it is known as a computer generated hologram which can show virtual objects or scenes Optical holography needs a laser light to record the light field The reproduced light field can generate an image that has the depth and parallax of the original scene 1 A hologram is usually unintelligible when viewed under diffuse ambient light When suitably lit the interference pattern diffracts the light into an accurate reproduction of the original light field and the objects that were in it exhibit visual depth cues such as parallax and perspective that change realistically with the different angles of viewing That is the view of the image from different angles shows the subject viewed from similar angles A hologram is traditionally generated by overlaying a second wavefront known as the reference beam onto a wavefront of interest This generates an interference pattern which is then captured on a physical medium When the recorded interference pattern is later illuminated by the second wavefront it is diffracted to recreate the original wavefront 2 The 3D image from a hologram can often be viewed with non laser light However in common practice major image quality compromises are made to remove the need for laser illumination to view the hologram A computer generated hologram is created by digitally modeling and combining two wavefronts to generate an interference pattern image This image can then be printed onto a mask or film and illuminated with an appropriate light source to reconstruct the desired wavefront 2 Alternatively the interference pattern image can be directly displayed on a dynamic holographic display 3 Holographic portraiture often resorts to a non holographic intermediate imaging procedure to avoid the dangerous high powered pulsed lasers which would be needed to optically freeze moving subjects as perfectly as the extremely motion intolerant holographic recording process requires Early holography required high power and expensive lasers Currently mass produced low cost laser diodes such as those found on DVD recorders and used in other common applications can be used to make holograms They have made holography much more accessible to low budget researchers artists and dedicated hobbyists Most holograms produced are of static objects but systems for displaying changing scenes on dynamic holographic displays are now being developed 4 5 The word holography comes from the Greek words ὅlos holos whole and grafh graphe writing or drawing Contents 1 History 2 Basics of holography 2 1 Laser 2 2 Apparatus 2 3 Process 2 4 Comparison with photography 3 Physics of holography 3 1 Plane wavefronts 3 2 Point sources 3 3 Complex objects 4 Applications 4 1 Art 4 2 Data storage 4 3 Dynamic holography 4 4 Hobbyist use 4 5 Holographic interferometry 4 6 Interferometric microscopy 4 7 Sensors or biosensors 4 8 Security 4 8 1 High security registration plates 5 Holography using other types of waves 6 False holograms 7 Tactile holograms 8 In fiction 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit source source source source source source track Introduction to Holography 1972 educational film The Hungarian British physicist Dennis Gabor invented holography in 1948 while he was looking for a way to improve image resolution in electron microscopes 6 7 8 Gabor s work was built on pioneering work in the field of X ray microscopy by other scientists including Mieczyslaw Wolfke in 1920 and William Lawrence Bragg in 1939 9 The formulation of holography was an unexpected result of Gabor s research into improving electron microscopes at the British Thomson Houston Company BTH in Rugby England and the company filed a patent in December 1947 patent GB685286 The technique as originally invented is still used in electron microscopy where it is known as electron holography Gabor was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1971 for his invention and development of the holographic method 10 nbsp Horizontal symmetric text by Dieter JungOptical holography did not really advance until the development of the laser in 1960 The development of the laser enabled the first practical optical holograms that recorded 3D objects to be made in 1962 by Yuri Denisyuk in the Soviet Union 11 and by Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks at the University of Michigan US 12 Early optical holograms used silver halide photographic emulsions as the recording medium They were not very efficient as the produced diffraction grating absorbed much of the incident light Various methods of converting the variation in transmission to a variation in refractive index known as bleaching were developed which enabled much more efficient holograms to be produced 13 14 15 A major advance in the field of holography was made by Stephen Benton who invented a way to create holograms that can be viewed with natural light instead of lasers These are called rainbow holograms 8 Basics of holography edit nbsp Recording a hologram nbsp Reconstructing a hologram nbsp This is a photograph of a small part of an unbleached transmission hologram viewed through a microscope The hologram recorded an image of a toy van and car It is no more possible to discern the subject of the hologram from this pattern than it is to identify what music has been recorded by looking at a CD surface The holographic information is recorded by the speckle pattern Holography is a technique for recording and reconstructing light fields 16 Section 1 A light field is generally the result of a light source scattered off objects Holography can be thought of as somewhat similar to sound recording whereby a sound field created by vibrating matter like musical instruments or vocal cords is encoded in such a way that it can be reproduced later without the presence of the original vibrating matter 17 However it is even more similar to Ambisonic sound recording in which any listening angle of a sound field can be reproduced in the reproduction Laser edit In laser holography the hologram is recorded using a source of laser light which is very pure in its color and orderly in its composition Various setups may be used and several types of holograms can be made but all involve the interaction of light coming from different directions and producing a microscopic interference pattern which a plate film or other medium photographically records In one common arrangement the laser beam is split into two one known as the object beam and the other as the reference beam The object beam is expanded by passing it through a lens and used to illuminate the subject The recording medium is located where this light after being reflected or scattered by the subject will strike it The edges of the medium will ultimately serve as a window through which the subject is seen so its location is chosen with that in mind The reference beam is expanded and made to shine directly on the medium where it interacts with the light coming from the subject to create the desired interference pattern Like conventional photography holography requires an appropriate exposure time to correctly affect the recording medium Unlike conventional photography during the exposure the light source the optical elements the recording medium and the subject must all remain motionless relative to each other to within about a quarter of the wavelength of the light or the interference pattern will be blurred and the hologram spoiled With living subjects and some unstable materials that is only possible if a very intense and extremely brief pulse of laser light is used a hazardous procedure which is rarely done outside of scientific and industrial laboratory settings Exposures lasting several seconds to several minutes using a much lower powered continuously operating laser are typical Apparatus edit A hologram can be made by shining part of the light beam directly into the recording medium and the other part onto the object in such a way that some of the scattered light falls onto the recording medium A more flexible arrangement for recording a hologram requires the laser beam to be aimed through a series of elements that change it in different ways The first element is a beam splitter that divides the beam into two identical beams each aimed in different directions One beam known as the illumination or object beam is spread using lenses and directed onto the scene using mirrors Some of the light scattered reflected from the scene then falls onto the recording medium The second beam known as the reference beam is also spread through the use of lenses but is directed so that it does not come in contact with the scene and instead travels directly onto the recording medium Several different materials can be used as the recording medium One of the most common is a film very similar to photographic film silver halide photographic emulsion but with much smaller light reactive grains preferably with diameters less than 20 nm making it capable of the much higher resolution that holograms require A layer of this recording medium e g silver halide is attached to a transparent substrate which is commonly glass but may also be plastic Process edit When the two laser beams reach the recording medium their light waves intersect and interfere with each other It is this interference pattern that is imprinted on the recording medium The pattern itself is seemingly random as it represents the way in which the scene s light interfered with the original light source but not the original light source itself The interference pattern can be considered an encoded version of the scene requiring a particular key the original light source in order to view its contents This missing key is provided later by shining a laser identical to the one used to record the hologram onto the developed film When this beam illuminates the hologram it is diffracted by the hologram s surface pattern This produces a light field identical to the one originally produced by the scene and scattered onto the hologram Comparison with photography edit Holography may be better understood via an examination of its differences from ordinary photography A hologram represents a recording of information regarding the light that came from the original scene as scattered in a range of directions rather than from only one direction as in a photograph This allows the scene to be viewed from a range of different angles as if it were still present A photograph can be recorded using normal light sources sunlight or electric lighting whereas a laser is required to record a hologram A lens is required in photography to record the image whereas in holography the light from the object is scattered directly onto the recording medium A holographic recording requires a second light beam the reference beam to be directed onto the recording medium A photograph can be viewed in a wide range of lighting conditions whereas holograms can only be viewed with very specific forms of illumination When a photograph is cut in half each piece shows half of the scene When a hologram is cut in half the whole scene can still be seen in each piece This is because whereas each point in a photograph only represents light scattered from a single point in the scene each point on a holographic recording includes information about light scattered from every point in the scene It can be thought of as viewing a street outside a house through a 120 cm 120 cm 4 ft 4 ft window then through a 60 cm 120 cm 2 ft 4 ft window One can see all of the same things through the smaller window by moving the head to change the viewing angle but the viewer can see more at once through the 120 cm 4 ft window A photographic stereogram is a two dimensional representation that can produce a three dimensional effect but only from one point of view whereas the reproduced viewing range of a hologram adds many more depth perception cues that were present in the original scene These cues are recognized by the human brain and translated into the same perception of a three dimensional image as when the original scene might have been viewed A photograph clearly maps out the light field of the original scene The developed hologram s surface consists of a very fine seemingly random pattern which appears to bear no relationship to the scene it recorded Physics of holography editMain article Physics of optical holography For a better understanding of the process it is necessary to understand interference and diffraction Interference occurs when one or more wavefronts are superimposed Diffraction occurs when a wavefront encounters an object The process of producing a holographic reconstruction is explained below purely in terms of interference and diffraction It is somewhat simplified but is accurate enough to give an understanding of how the holographic process works For those unfamiliar with these concepts it is worthwhile to read those articles before reading further in this article Plane wavefronts edit A diffraction grating is a structure with a repeating pattern A simple example is a metal plate with slits cut at regular intervals A light wave that is incident on a grating is split into several waves the direction of these diffracted waves is determined by the grating spacing and the wavelength of the light A simple hologram can be made by superimposing two plane waves from the same light source on a holographic recording medium The two waves interfere giving a straight line fringe pattern whose intensity varies sinusoidally across the medium The spacing of the fringe pattern is determined by the angle between the two waves and by the wavelength of the light The recorded light pattern is a diffraction grating When it is illuminated by only one of the waves used to create it it can be shown that one of the diffracted waves emerges at the same angle at which the second wave was originally incident so that the second wave has been reconstructed Thus the recorded light pattern is a holographic recording as defined above Point sources edit nbsp Sinusoidal zone plateIf the recording medium is illuminated with a point source and a normally incident plane wave the resulting pattern is a sinusoidal zone plate which acts as a negative Fresnel lens whose focal length is equal to the separation of the point source and the recording plane When a plane wave front illuminates a negative lens it is expanded into a wave that appears to diverge from the focal point of the lens Thus when the recorded pattern is illuminated with the original plane wave some of the light is diffracted into a diverging beam equivalent to the original spherical wave a holographic recording of the point source has been created When the plane wave is incident at a non normal angle at the time of recording the pattern formed is more complex but still acts as a negative lens if it is illuminated at the original angle Complex objects edit To record a hologram of a complex object a laser beam is first split into two beams of light One beam illuminates the object which then scatters light onto the recording medium According to diffraction theory each point in the object acts as a point source of light so the recording medium can be considered to be illuminated by a set of point sources located at varying distances from the medium The second reference beam illuminates the recording medium directly Each point source wave interferes with the reference beam giving rise to its own sinusoidal zone plate in the recording medium The resulting pattern is the sum of all these zone plates which combine to produce a random speckle pattern as in the photograph above When the hologram is illuminated by the original reference beam each of the individual zone plates reconstructs the object wave that produced it and these individual wavefronts are combined to reconstruct the whole of the object beam The viewer perceives a wavefront that is identical with the wavefront scattered from the object onto the recording medium so that it appears that the object is still in place even if it has been removed Applications editArt edit Early on artists saw the potential of holography as a medium and gained access to science laboratories to create their work Holographic art is often the result of collaborations between scientists and artists although some holographers would regard themselves as both an artist and a scientist Salvador Dali claimed to have been the first to employ holography artistically He was certainly the first and best known surrealist to do so but the 1972 New York exhibit of Dali holograms had been preceded by the holographic art exhibition that was held at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan in 1968 and by the one at the Finch College gallery in New York in 1970 which attracted national media attention 18 In Great Britain Margaret Benyon began using holography as an artistic medium in the late 1960s and had a solo exhibition at the University of Nottingham art gallery in 1969 19 This was followed in 1970 by a solo show at the Lisson Gallery in London which was billed as the first London expo of holograms and stereoscopic paintings 20 During the 1970s a number of art studios and schools were established each with their particular approach to holography Notably there was the San Francisco School of Holography established by Lloyd Cross The Museum of Holography in New York founded by Rosemary Posy H Jackson the Royal College of Art in London and the Lake Forest College Symposiums organised by Tung Jeong 21 None of these studios still exist however there is the Center for the Holographic Arts in New York 22 and the HOLOcenter in Seoul which offers artists a place to create and exhibit work During the 1980s many artists who worked with holography helped the diffusion of this so called new medium in the art world such as Harriet Casdin Silver of the United States Dieter Jung of Germany and Moyses Baumstein of Brazil each one searching for a proper language to use with the three dimensional work avoiding the simple holographic reproduction of a sculpture or object For instance in Brazil many concrete poets Augusto de Campos Decio Pignatari Julio Plaza and Jose Wagner Garcia associated with Moyses Baumstein found in holography a way to express themselves and to renew Concrete Poetry A small but active group of artists still integrate holographic elements into their work 23 Some are associated with novel holographic techniques for example artist Matt Brand 24 employed computational mirror design to eliminate image distortion from specular holography The MIT Museum 25 and Jonathan Ross 26 both have extensive collections of holography and on line catalogues of art holograms Data storage edit Main article Holographic data storage Holographic data storage is a technique that can store information at high density inside crystals or photopolymers The ability to store large amounts of information in some kind of medium is of great importance as many electronic products incorporate storage devices As current storage techniques such as Blu ray Disc reach the limit of possible data density due to the diffraction limited size of the writing beams holographic storage has the potential to become the next generation of popular storage media The advantage of this type of data storage is that the volume of the recording media is used instead of just the surface Currently available SLMs can produce about 1000 different images a second at 1024 1024 bit resolution which would result in about one gigabit per second writing speed 27 In 2005 companies such as Optware and Maxell produced a 120 mm disc that uses a holographic layer to store data to a potential 3 9 TB a format called Holographic Versatile Disc As of September 2014 no commercial product has been released Another company InPhase Technologies was developing a competing format but went bankrupt in 2011 and all its assets were sold to Akonia Holographics LLC While many holographic data storage models have used page based storage where each recorded hologram holds a large amount of data more recent research into using submicrometre sized microholograms has resulted in several potential 3D optical data storage solutions While this approach to data storage can not attain the high data rates of page based storage the tolerances technological hurdles and cost of producing a commercial product are significantly lower Dynamic holography edit In static holography recording developing and reconstructing occur sequentially and a permanent hologram is produced There also exist holographic materials that do not need the developing process and can record a hologram in a very short time This allows one to use holography to perform some simple operations in an all optical way Examples of applications of such real time holograms include phase conjugate mirrors time reversal of light optical cache memories image processing pattern recognition of time varying images and optical computing The amount of processed information can be very high terabits s since the operation is performed in parallel on a whole image This compensates for the fact that the recording time which is in the order of a microsecond is still very long compared to the processing time of an electronic computer The optical processing performed by a dynamic hologram is also much less flexible than electronic processing On one side one has to perform the operation always on the whole image and on the other side the operation a hologram can perform is basically either a multiplication or a phase conjugation In optics addition and Fourier transform are already easily performed in linear materials the latter simply by a lens This enables some applications such as a device that compares images in an optical way 28 The search for novel nonlinear optical materials for dynamic holography is an active area of research The most common materials are photorefractive crystals but in semiconductors or semiconductor heterostructures such as quantum wells atomic vapors and gases plasmas and even liquids it was possible to generate holograms A particularly promising application is optical phase conjugation It allows the removal of the wavefront distortions a light beam receives when passing through an aberrating medium by sending it back through the same aberrating medium with a conjugated phase This is useful for example in free space optical communications to compensate for atmospheric turbulence the phenomenon that gives rise to the twinkling of starlight Hobbyist use edit nbsp Peace Within Reach a Denisyuk DCG hologram by amateur Dave BattinSince the beginning of holography many holographers have explored its uses and displayed them to the public In 1971 Lloyd Cross opened the San Francisco School of Holography and taught amateurs how to make holograms using only a small typically 5 mW helium neon laser and inexpensive home made equipment Holography had been supposed to require a very expensive metal optical table set up to lock all the involved elements down in place and damp any vibrations that could blur the interference fringes and ruin the hologram Cross s home brew alternative was a sandbox made of a cinder block retaining wall on a plywood base supported on stacks of old tires to isolate it from ground vibrations and filled with sand that had been washed to remove dust The laser was securely mounted atop the cinder block wall The mirrors and simple lenses needed for directing splitting and expanding the laser beam were affixed to short lengths of PVC pipe which were stuck into the sand at the desired locations The subject and the photographic plate holder were similarly supported within the sandbox The holographer turned off the room light blocked the laser beam near its source using a small relay controlled shutter loaded a plate into the holder in the dark left the room waited a few minutes to let everything settle then made the exposure by remotely operating the laser shutter In 1979 Jason Sapan opened the Holographic Studios in New York City Since then they have been involved in the production of many holographs for many artists as well as companies 29 Sapan has been described as the last professional holographer of New York Many of these holographers would go on to produce art holograms In 1983 Fred Unterseher a co founder of the San Francisco School of Holography and a well known holographic artist published the Holography Handbook an easy to read guide to making holograms at home This brought in a new wave of holographers and provided simple methods for using the then available AGFA silver halide recording materials In 2000 Frank DeFreitas published the Shoebox Holography Book and introduced the use of inexpensive laser pointers to countless hobbyists For many years it had been assumed that certain characteristics of semiconductor laser diodes made them virtually useless for creating holograms but when they were eventually put to the test of practical experiment it was found that not only was this untrue but that some actually provided a coherence length much greater than that of traditional helium neon gas lasers This was a very important development for amateurs as the price of red laser diodes had dropped from hundreds of dollars in the early 1980s to about 5 after they entered the mass market as a component of DVD players in the late 1990s Now there are thousands of amateur holographers worldwide By late 2000 holography kits with inexpensive laser pointer diodes entered the mainstream consumer market These kits enabled students teachers and hobbyists to make several kinds of holograms without specialized equipment and became popular gift items by 2005 30 The introduction of holography kits with self developing plates in 2003 made it possible for hobbyists to create holograms without the bother of wet chemical processing 31 In 2006 a large number of surplus holography quality green lasers Coherent C315 became available and put dichromated gelatin DCG holography within the reach of the amateur holographer The holography community was surprised at the amazing sensitivity of DCG to green light It had been assumed that this sensitivity would be uselessly slight or non existent Jeff Blyth responded with the G307 formulation of DCG to increase the speed and sensitivity to these new lasers 32 Kodak and Agfa the former major suppliers of holography quality silver halide plates and films are no longer in the market While other manufacturers have helped fill the void many amateurs are now making their own materials The favorite formulations are dichromated gelatin Methylene Blue sensitised dichromated gelatin and diffusion method silver halide preparations Jeff Blyth has published very accurate methods for making these in a small lab or garage 33 A small group of amateurs are even constructing their own pulsed lasers to make holograms of living subjects and other unsteady or moving objects 34 Holographic interferometry edit Main article holographic interferometry Holographic interferometry HI is a technique that enables static and dynamic displacements of objects with optically rough surfaces to be measured to optical interferometric precision i e to fractions of a wavelength of light 35 36 It can also be used to detect optical path length variations in transparent media which enables for example fluid flow to be visualized and analyzed It can also be used to generate contours representing the form of the surface or the isodose regions in radiation dosimetry 37 It has been widely used to measure stress strain and vibration in engineering structures Interferometric microscopy edit Main article Interferometric microscopy The hologram keeps the information on the amplitude and phase of the field Several holograms may keep information about the same distribution of light emitted to various directions The numerical analysis of such holograms allows one to emulate large numerical aperture which in turn enables enhancement of the resolution of optical microscopy The corresponding technique is called interferometric microscopy Recent achievements of interferometric microscopy allow one to approach the quarter wavelength limit of resolution 38 Sensors or biosensors edit Main article Holographic sensor The hologram is made with a modified material that interacts with certain molecules generating a change in the fringe periodicity or refractive index therefore the color of the holographic reflection 39 40 Security edit Main article Security hologram nbsp Identigram as a security element in a German identity card nbsp Dove hologram used on some credit cardsHolograms are commonly used for security as they are replicated from a master hologram that requires expensive specialized and technologically advanced equipment and are thus difficult to forge They are used widely in many currencies such as the Brazilian 20 50 and 100 reais notes British 5 10 20 and 50 pound notes South Korean 5000 10 000 and 50 000 won notes Japanese 5000 and 10 000 yen notes Indian 50 100 500 and 2000 rupee notes and all the currently circulating banknotes of the Canadian dollar Croatian kuna Danish krone and Euro They can also be found in credit and bank cards as well as passports ID cards books food packaging DVDs and sports equipment Such holograms come in a variety of forms from adhesive strips that are laminated on packaging for fast moving consumer goods to holographic tags on electronic products They often contain textual or pictorial elements to protect identities and separate genuine articles from counterfeits Holographic scanners are in use in post offices larger shipping firms and automated conveyor systems to determine the three dimensional size of a package They are often used in tandem with checkweighers to allow automated pre packing of given volumes such as a truck or pallet for bulk shipment of goods Holograms produced in elastomers can be used as stress strain reporters due to its elasticity and compressibility the pressure and force applied are correlated to the reflected wavelength therefore its color 41 Holography technique can also be effectively used for radiation dosimetry 42 43 High security registration plates edit High security holograms can be used on license plates for vehicles such as cars and motorcycles As of April 2019 holographic license plates are required on vehicles in parts of India to aid in identification and security especially in cases of car theft Such number plates hold electronic data of vehicles and have a unique ID number and a sticker to indicate authenticity 44 Holography using other types of waves editIn principle it is possible to make a hologram for any wave Electron holography is the application of holography techniques to electron waves rather than light waves Electron holography was invented by Dennis Gabor to improve the resolution and avoid the aberrations of the transmission electron microscope Today it is commonly used to study electric and magnetic fields in thin films as magnetic and electric fields can shift the phase of the interfering wave passing through the sample 45 The principle of electron holography can also be applied to interference lithography 46 Acoustic holography enables sound maps of an object to be generated Measurements of the acoustic field are made at many points close to the object These measurements are digitally processed to produce the images of the object 47 Atomic holography has evolved out of the development of the basic elements of atom optics With the Fresnel diffraction lens and atomic mirrors atomic holography follows a natural step in the development of the physics and applications of atomic beams Recent developments including atomic mirrors and especially ridged mirrors have provided the tools necessary for the creation of atomic holograms 48 although such holograms have not yet been commercialized Neutron beam holography has been used to see the inside of solid objects 49 Holograms with x rays are generated by using synchrotrons or x ray free electron lasers as radiation sources and pixelated detectors such as CCDs as recording medium 50 The reconstruction is then retrieved via computation Due to the shorter wavelength of x rays compared to visible light this approach allows imaging objects with higher spatial resolution 51 As free electron lasers can provide ultrashort and x ray pulses in the range of femtoseconds which are intense and coherent x ray holography has been used to capture ultrafast dynamic processes 52 53 54 False holograms edit nbsp A Pepper s ghost illusion made from a clear plastic frustum source source source source source source source source Shows making using of projected images are erroneously marketed as holographic There are many optical effects that are falsely confused with holography such as the effects produced by lenticular printing the Pepper s ghost illusion or modern variants such as the Musion Eyeliner tomography and volumetric displays 55 56 Such illusions have been called fauxlography 57 58 The Pepper s ghost technique being the easiest to implement of these methods is most prevalent in 3D displays that claim to be or are referred to as holographic While the original illusion used in theater involved actual physical objects and persons located offstage modern variants replace the source object with a digital screen which displays imagery generated with 3D computer graphics to provide the necessary depth cues The reflection which seems to float mid air is still flat however thus less realistic than if an actual 3D object was being reflected Examples of this digital version of Pepper s ghost illusion include the Gorillaz performances in the 2005 MTV Europe Music Awards and the 48th Grammy Awards and Tupac Shakur s virtual performance at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in 2012 rapping alongside Snoop Dogg during his set with Dr Dre 59 Digital avatars of the Swedish supergroup ABBA were displayed on stage in May 2022 60 The ABBA performance used technology that was an updated version of Pepper s Ghost created by Industrial Light amp Magic 61 American rock group KISS unveiled similar digital avatars in December 2023 to tour in their place at the conclusion of the End of the Road World Tour using the same Pepper s Ghost technology as the ABBA avatars 62 An even simpler illusion can be created by rear projecting realistic images into semi transparent screens The rear projection is necessary because otherwise the semi transparency of the screen would allow the background to be illuminated by the projection which would break the illusion Crypton Future Media a music software company that produced Hatsune Miku 63 one of many Vocaloid singing synthesizer applications has produced concerts that have Miku along with other Crypton Vocaloids performing on stage as holographic characters These concerts use rear projection onto a semi transparent DILAD screen 64 65 to achieve its holographic effect 66 67 In 2011 in Beijing apparel company Burberry produced the Burberry Prorsum Autumn Winter 2011 Hologram Runway Show which included life size 2 D projections of models The company s own video 68 shows several centered and off center shots of the main 2 dimensional projection screen the latter revealing the flatness of the virtual models The claim that holography was used was reported as fact in the trade media 69 In Madrid on 10 April 2015 a public visual presentation called Hologramas por la Libertad Holograms for Liberty featuring a ghostly virtual crowd of demonstrators was used to protest a new Spanish law that prohibits citizens from demonstrating in public places Although widely called a hologram protest in news reports 70 no actual holography was involved it was yet another technologically updated variant of the Pepper s ghost illusion Holography is distinct from specular holography which is a technique for making three dimensional images by controlling the motion of specularities on a two dimensional surface 71 It works by reflectively or refractively manipulating bundles of light rays not by using interference and diffraction Tactile holograms editSee also Solid light and Stopping lightIn fiction editMain article Holography in fiction Holography has been widely referred to in movies novels and TV usually in science fiction starting in the late 1970s 72 Science fiction writers absorbed the urban legends surrounding holography that had been spread by overly enthusiastic scientists and entrepreneurs trying to market the idea 72 This had the effect of giving the public overly high expectations of the capability of holography due to the unrealistic depictions of it in most fiction where they are fully three dimensional computer projections that are sometimes tactile through the use of force fields 72 Examples of this type of depiction include the hologram of Princess Leia in Star Wars Arnold Rimmer from Red Dwarf who was later converted to hard light to make him solid and the Holodeck and Emergency Medical Hologram from Star Trek 72 Holography has served as an inspiration for many video games with science fiction elements In many titles fictional holographic technology has been used to reflect real life misrepresentations of potential military use of holograms such as the mirage tanks in Command amp Conquer Red Alert 2 that can disguise themselves as trees 73 Player characters are able to use holographic decoys in games such as Halo Reach and Crysis 2 to confuse and distract the enemy 73 Starcraft ghost agent Nova has access to holo decoy as one of her three primary abilities in Heroes of the Storm 74 Fictional depictions of holograms have however inspired technological advances in other fields such as augmented reality that promise to fulfill the fictional depictions of holograms by other means 75 See also edit3D file formats Computer generated holography Holographic display Augmented reality Australian Holographics Autostereoscopy Digital holography Digital holographic 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Archived from the original on 30 October 2017 Gordon Marcus A 2017 Habitat 44º MFA OCAD University doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 30421 88802 Sung Carolyn Gauk Roger Topher Quan Denise Iavazzi Jessica 16 April 2012 Tupac returns as a hologram at Coachella The Marquee Blog CNN Blogs Archived from the original on 4 May 2012 Retrieved 21 April 2012 Brause Mills 27 May 2022 Super Trouper ABBA returns to stage as virtual avatars for London gigs Reuters Retrieved 4 June 2022 Carter Ninian 27 November 2018 ABBA s mysterious Abbatars revealed Graphic News Retrieved 4 June 2022 Amorosi A D 3 December 2023 KISS Says Farewell at Madison Square Garden Before Passing the Torch to Band s Avatar Successors Concert Review Variety Retrieved 3 December 2023 Crypton クリプトン in Japanese Crypton co jp Retrieved 21 April 2012 G Adrian LA s Anime Expo hosting Hatsune Miku s first US live performance on 2 July Retrieved 20 April 2012 We can invite Hatsune Miku in my room Part 2 video Youtube com 7 September 2011 Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 21 April 2012 Technically incorrect Tomorrow s Miley Cyrus A hologram live in concert Retrieved 29 April 2011 Hatsune Miku World is Mine Live in HD YouTube Retrieved 29 April 2011 Burberry Beijing Full Show Youtube com Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 21 April 2012 Burberry lands in China Retrieved 14 June 2011 First Hologram Protest in History Held Against Spain s Gag Law revolution news com Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 13 April 2015 specular holography how Zintaglio com Retrieved 21 April 2012 a b c d Johnston Sean 2006 The Hologram and Popular Culture Holographic Visions a History of New Science Oxford Oxford University Press UK pp 405 408 ISBN 978 0191513886 OCLC 437109030 a b Johnston Sean F 2015 11 Channeling Dreams Holograms A Cultural History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0191021381 Nova Heroes of the Storm us battle net Retrieved 20 October 2019 Richardson Martin 13 November 2017 The Hologram Principles and Techniques Wiltshire John D Hoboken NJ ISBN 978 1119088905 OCLC 1000385946 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bibliography editHariharan P 1996 Optical Holography Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43965 5 Hariharan P 2002 Basics of Holography Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 00200 1 Lipson A Lipson SG Lipson H Optical Physics 2011 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 49345 1Further reading editLasers and holography an introduction to coherent optics W E Kock Dover Publications 1981 ISBN 978 0 486 24041 1 Principles of holography H M Smith Wiley 1976 ISBN 978 0 471 80341 6 G Berger et al Digital Data Storage in a phase encoded holographic memory system data quality and security Proceedings of SPIE Vol 4988 pp 104 111 2003 Holographic Visions A History of New Science Sean F Johnston Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0 19 857122 4 Saxby Graham 2003 Practical Holography Third Edition Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 0 7503 0912 7 Three Dimensional Imaging Techniques Takanori Okoshi Atara Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 9822251 4 1 Holographic Microscopy of Phase Microscopic Objects Theory and Practice Tatyana Tishko Tishko Dmitry Titar Vladimir World Scientific 2010 ISBN 978 981 4289 54 2 Richardson Martin J Wiltshire John D 2017 Richardson Martin J Wiltshire John D eds The Hologram Principles and Techniques Wiley doi 10 1002 9781119088929 ISBN 9781119088905 OCLC 1000385946 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Holography Dennis Gabor Autobiography 30 September 2004 Nobelprize org Holography 1948 1971 Nobel Lecture 11 December 1971 by Dennis Gabor How Holograms Work How Stuff Works by Tracy V Wilson 30 August 2023 Holography by The Strange Theory of Light QED Making Real Holograms at YouTube by The Thought Emporium 19 November 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Holography amp oldid 1218083533, wikipedia, wiki, 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