2. Contents • What is Holography
• Why Holography
• Types of Holograms
• How Holograms work
• Recording of hologram
• Reconstruction of hologram
• Advances in technology
• Applications & Future scope
• Conclusion
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3. What is holography
Holography is a technique that allows the light
scattered from an object to be recorded and later
reconstructed.
The technique to optically store, retrieve, and process
information.
Preserve the 3-D information of a holographed
subject
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4. Why
holographic
display
A high resolution three
dimensional recording of an
object
Glasses free 3D displayeed for
projection screen
Life like images
Interactive display
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6. How
holograms
work
The time-varying light field
of a scene with all its physical
properties is to be recorded
and then regenerated.
Hence the working of
holography is divided into
two phases:
•Recording
•Reconstruction
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7. Recording
of hologram Basic tools required to
make a hologram
includes a red lasers,
lenses, beam splitter,
mirrors and holographic
film
Holograms are recorded
in darker environment
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9. Process
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.
Hologram
Recording
Hologram
Reconstruction
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13. TEACHING AND TRAINING
ONE ON ONE WITH VIRTUAL HOLOGRAPHIC
IMAGES
SPORT TECHNIQUE COACHING AND
TRAINING
14. VIRTUAL COMMUNICATION
RECORD YOURSELF FOR FUTURE GREAT
GRANDCHILDREN
VIRTUAL SALES PRESENTATION
CORPORATE MEETINGS WITHOUT TRAVEL
THE PRESIDENTIAL VISIT
23. Conclusion Holographic Technology
and Spectral Imagining has
endless applications, as far
as the human mind can
imagine
In future, holographic
displays will be replacing
all present displays in all
sizes, from small phone
screen to large projectors
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24. References
Hologram Scaling with Wavelength http://hyperphysics.phy-
astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/optmod/scaleh.html#c1
N. J. Phillips and D. Porter, "An advance in the processing of
holograms," Journal of Physics E: Scientific Instruments (1976)
p. 631
Specular holography http://www.zintaglio.com/how.html
Scaling Holographic Images, http://hyperphysics.phy-
astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/optmod/holog.html#c5
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