Results 141 to 150 of about 1,825 (184)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Computer-generated holography as a generic display technology

Computer, 2005
Computer-generated holography technique is a powerful technology suitable for a wide range of display types, including 2D, stereoscopic, autostereoscopic, volumetric, and true 3D imaging. Computer-generated holography is an emerging technology, made possible by increasingly powerful computers, that avoids the interferometric recording step in ...
Chris Slinger   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Computer-Generated Holography And Optical Testing

Optical Engineering, 1980
A computer-generated hologram is a geometric pattern that can be used as a precise reference in an optical test. Computer-generated holograms can be used to make reference wavefronts that would be very difficult and expensive to make by other methods. This paper reviews the development of computer-generated holograms for optical testing.
exaly   +2 more sources

Incoherent computer-generated holography

Optics Letters, 2022
We present a method for computer-generated holography (CGH) using spatially and temporally incoherent light. The proposed method synthesizes a hologram cascade by solving an inverse problem for the propagation of incoherent light. The spatial incoherence removes speckle noise in CGH, and the temporal incoherence simplifies the optical setup, including ...
Ryutaro Suda   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Computer-generated holography with ordinary display

Optics Letters, 2023
We propose a method of computer-generated holography (CGH) using incoherent light emitted from a mobile phone screen. In this method, we suppose a cascade of holograms in which the first hologram is a color image displayed on the mobile phone screen. The hologram cascade is synthesized by solving an inverse problem with respect to the propagation of ...
Otoya Shigematsu   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Double-sided computer-generated holography

Optics Letters, 2023
We present a method for computer-generated holography (CGH) in which different images are reproduced on both sides of a hologram with a single illumination source. In the proposed method, we use a transmissive spatial light modulator (SLM) and a half mirror (HM) located downstream of the SLM. The light modulated by the SLM is partially reflected by the
Ryutaro Suda   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

A New Approach to Computer-Generated Holography

Applied Optics, 1970
A digital computer and automatic plotter have been used to produce a series of perspective views of a computer-stored three-dimensional object which is slightly rotated for each view. All of these views are combined together optically to produce a final hologram which can be viewed in high ambient light conditions. The reconstructed image appears three
M C, King, A M, Noll, D H, Berry
openaire   +2 more sources

Computer-generated holography in photorefractive materials

Optics Letters, 1990
We describe a method to create and reconstruct computer-generated Fourier-transform holograms in photorefractive materials. Holographic reconstructions are obtained from computer-generated data by imaging computer-generated holograms into a BaTiO3 crystal, using either spatially coherent or incoherent light.
L, Pugliese, G M, Morris
openaire   +2 more sources

Incoherent computer-generated holography: publisher’s note

Optics Letters, 2022
This publisher’s note contains a correction to Opt. Lett. 47 , 3844 ( 2022 ) 10.1364/OL.464454 .
Ryutaro, Suda   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Computer generated holography: an introduction

Applied Optics, 1987
A group of papers in the 15 Oct. 1987 issue of Applied Optics describe some recent advances in the field of computer generated holograms, and delineate historical trends.
openaire   +2 more sources

Computer generation of binary Fresnel holography

Applied Optics, 2011
Binarization of Fresnel holograms by direct thresholding based on the polarity of the fringe pattern is studied. It is found that if the hologram is binarized (i.e., for black and white hologram pixels) in this manner, only the edges of the object are preserved in the reconstructed image. To alleviate the errors caused by binarization, the use of error
Tsang, Peter   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy