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Beaming through to NOVEL USES for HOLOGRAPHY

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Lynn Savage, Features Editor, [email protected]

Typically, green, simple three-dimensional images of objects on flat paper are not unknown to today’s kids – or to anyone who has grown up during the past few decades. We encountered them first as wonderments – optical tricks that astounded and pleased the eye in the same way as flicker rings and early 3-D schlock movies. As playthings for kids, holographic pictures never exploded into the public conscience as lasers and telescopes did, but, more recently, holography has found several niches in which important work can be done. And a touch of silver nanoparticles To create a...Read full article

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    Published: February 2010
    Glossary
    diffraction grating
    A diffraction grating is an optical component consisting of a surface with a periodic structure of equally spaced, parallel grooves or rulings. These rulings act as an array of closely spaced slits or reflective elements that cause incoming light to diffract or spread out into its component wavelengths. When monochromatic light (light of a single wavelength) illuminates a diffraction grating, the grooves cause the light to interfere constructively and destructively, resulting in a pattern...
    holographic grating
    A holographic grating is a type of diffraction grating that is produced using holographic recording techniques. It consists of a periodic structure of alternating transparent and opaque regions, which diffracts incident light into specific directions based on the spacing and orientation of the grating lines. Here are the key features and characteristics of holographic gratings: Holographic recording: Holographic gratings are fabricated using holographic recording methods, which involve...
    holography
    Holography is a technique used to capture and reconstruct three-dimensional images using the principles of interference and diffraction of light. Unlike conventional photography, which records only the intensity of light, holography records both the intensity and phase information of light waves scattered from an object. This allows the faithful reproduction of the object's three-dimensional structure, including its depth, shape, and texture. The process of holography typically involves the...
    photoresist
    Photoresist is a light-sensitive material used in photolithography processes, particularly in the fabrication of semiconductor devices, integrated circuits, and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). It is a crucial component in the patterning of semiconductor wafers during the manufacturing process. The primary function of photoresist is to undergo a chemical or physical change when exposed to light, making it selectively soluble or insoluble in a subsequent development step. The general...
    reference beam
    In holography, the beam of light that is directed from the beamsplitter to the recording medium, where it interferes with the object beam to generate the hologram.
    Basic SciencebeamsplittersBeckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technologyblood cellscellsdefensediffraction gratingFeaturesFranceGabriel PopescuHoloFusehologramsholographic gratingholographic picturesholographyIDidentificationidentity theftilluminating beamImaginginterferometersJDSU Corp.Lavinia BalanLynn SavageMicroscopynanoparticlesneuronsphotochemicstryphotoresistpolycarbonate filmsreference beamsecuritystem cellsTest & MeasurementtumorsUniversité de Haute-AlsaceLasers

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