Title: Holography
1Holography
2History of Holography
- Invented in 1948 by Dennis Gabor for use in
electron microscopy, before the invention of the
laser - Leith and Upatnieks (1962) applied laser light to
holography and introduced an important off-axis
technique
3Conventional vs. Holographic photography
- Conventional
- 2-d version of a 3-d scene
- Photograph lacks depth perception or parallax
- Film sensitive only to radiant energy
- Phase relation (i.e. interference) are lost
4Conventional vs. Holographic photography
- Hologram
- Freezes the intricate wavefront of light that
carries all the visual information of the scene - To view a hologram, the wavefront is
reconstructed - View what we would have seen if present at the
original scene through the window defined by the
hologram - Provides depth perception and parallax
5Conventional vs. Holographic photography
- Hologram
- Converts phase information into amplitude
information (in-phase - maximum amplitude,
out-of-phase minimum amplitude) - Interfere wavefront of light from a scene with a
reference wave - The hologram is a complex interference pattern of
microscopically spaced fringes - holos Greek for whole message
6Hologram of a point source
Construction of the hologram of a point
source Any object can be represented as a
collection of points
Photographic plate
- Photosensitive plate
- Records interference pattern (linear response)
- Emulsion has small grain structure (??)
Reference wave - plane
x
z
Object wave - spherical
y
7Point object hologram construction Intensity
distribution on plate
- Reference wave
- Object wave
- Intensity distribution on plate
8Hologram construction
Gabor zone plate
Maxima for kr2m? or rm? i.e. if the OPL
difference OZ OP is an integral number of
wavelengths, the reference beam arrives at P in
step with the scattered (i.e. object) beam.
9Hologram
- When developed the photographic plate will have a
transmittance which depends on the intensity
distribution in the recorded plate - tb backgrond transmittance due to R2 term
- B parameter which is a function of the
recording an developing process
10Hologram reconstruction
- When illuminated by a coherent wave, A(x,y),
known as the reconstruction wave, the optical
field emerging from the transparency is, - i.e. a superposition of 4 waves
- If A(x,y)R(x,y), i.e. reconstruction and
reference waves are identical,
11Hologram reconstruction
- Three terms in the reconstructed wave
Direct wave identical to reference wave except
for an overall change in amplitude
Object wave identical to object wave except for
a change in intensity
Conjugate wave complex conjugate of object wave
displaced by a phase angle 2 ?
12Hologram reconstruction
- Three terms in the reconstructed wave of the
point hologram
Direct wave identical to reference wave
(propagates along z) except for an overall change
in amplitude
- Conjugate wave spherical wave collapsing to a
point at a distance z to the right of the
hologram - a real image
- displaced by a phase angle 2kz
Object wave Spherical wave except for a change
in intensity Br2 i.e. reconstructed wavefront
13Direct, object and conjugate waves
Object wave
Reference wave
Real image
Virtual image
Direct wave
Conjugate wave
-z
z
z0
14Hologram Direct, object and conjugate waves
- Direct wave corresponds to zeroth order grating
diffraction pattern - Object wave gives virtual image of the object
(reconstructs object wavefront) first order
diffraction - Conjugate wave conjugate point, real image (not
useful since image is inside-out due to negative
phase angle) first order diffraction - In general, we wish to view only the object wave
the other waves just confuse the issue
15Off-axis- Direct, object and conjugate waves
Use an off-axis system to record the hologram,
ensuring separation of the three waves on
reconstruction
Reference wave
Object wave
Direct wave
Conjugate wave
Virtual image
Real image
16Hologram Reflection vs. Transmission
- Transmission hologram reference and object waves
traverse the film from the same side - Reflection hologram reference and object waves
traverse the emulsion from opposite sides
View in Transmission
View in reflection
17Hologram Wavelength
- With a different color, the virtual image will
appear at a different angle (i.e. as a grating,
the hologram disperses light of different
wavelengths at different angles) - Volume hologram emulsion thickness gtgt fringe
spacing - Can be used to reporduce images in their original
color when illuminated by white light. - Use multiple exposures of scene in three primary
colors (R,G,B)
18Hologram Some Applications
- Microscopy M ?r/?s
- Increase magnification by viewing hologram with
longer wavelength - Produce hologram with x-ray laser, when viewed
with visible light M 106 - 3-d images of microscopic objects DNA, viruses
- Interferometry
- Small changes in OPL can be measured by viewing
the direct image of the object and the
holographic image (interference pattern produce
finges ? ?l) - E.g. stress points, wings of fruit fly in motion,
compression waves around a speeding bullet,
convection currents around a hot filament