Diffraction, Fourier Optics and Imaging

Chapter 13 - Holography

13.1  INTRODUCTION

Holography involves recording a modulated form of a desired (object) wave. It is
also known as wave front reconstruction. The resulting device is called a hologram.
Two major types of holography can be called analog and digital holography. Analog
holography deals with continuous-space waves [Farhat, 1975], [Stroke, 1975].
Digital holography discussed in Chapters 15 and 16 results when the wave fields are
sampled, and the information carried in amplitude and/or phase of the wave is coded
with special algorithms. Digital holography is more commonly known as diffractive
optics
. Some other terminologies used for diffractive optics are computer-generated
holography, diffractive optical elements
(DOEs), and binary optics.

Holography was first discovered by Dennis Gabor in 1948, which is before the
invention of the laser [Gabor]. Being a communications engineer, he recognized that
the intensity resulting from the sum of a desired wave and a reference wave carries
the information on both the amplitude and the phase of the object wave. After the
invention of the laser as a coherent source, Gabor’s ideas became a practical reality.

This chapter consists of six sections. The basic mechanism of holography
also called coherent wave front recording and the Leith–Upatnieks hologram,
the first type of hologram successfully implemented with a laser setup, are
discussed in Section 13.2. A number of different types of holograms are
described in Section 13.3.

As holography is a well-defined mathematical process, it can be simulated in the
computer, and the results of holographic reconstruction can be displayed
graphically. How this can be done is described in Section 13.4. Holographic
imaging depends on a number of parameters such as wavelength and size. If these
change, so do the properties of the reconstructed images. Analysis of holographic
imaging and magnification as a function of these parameters are discussed in Section
13.5. As in optical imaging systems, aberrations limit the quality of holographic
images. Different types of aberrations in the case of holographic imaging are
discussed in Section 13.6.

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