Thursday, July 16, 2009

Holography




The invention: A lensless system of three-dimensional photography
that was one of the most important developments in twentieth
century optical science.
The people behind the invention:
Dennis Gabor (1900-1979), a Hungarian-born inventor and
physicist who was awarded the 1971 Nobel Prize in Physics
Emmett Leith (1927- ), a radar researcher who, with Juris
Upatnieks, produced the first laser holograms
Juris Upatnieks (1936- ), a radar researcher who, with
Emmett Leith, produced the first laser holograms
Easter Inspiration
The development of photography in the early 1900’s made possible
the recording of events and information in ways unknown before
the twentieth century: the photographing of star clusters, the
recording of the emission spectra of heated elements, the storing of
data in the form of small recorded images (for example, microfilm),
and the photographing of microscopic specimens, among other
things. Because of its vast importance to the scientist, the science of
photography has developed steadily.
An understanding of the photographic and holographic processes
requires some knowledge of the wave behavior of light. Light is an
electromagnetic wave that, like a water wave, has an amplitude and a
phase. The amplitude corresponds to the wave height, while the
phase indicates which part of the wave is passing a given point at a
given time. A cork floating in a pond bobs up and down as waves
pass under it. The position of the cork at any time depends on both
amplitude and phase: The phase determines on which part of the
wave the cork is floating at any given time, and the amplitude determines
how high or low the cork can be moved. Waves from more
than one source arriving at the cork combine in ways that depend on
their relative phases. If the waves meet in the same phase, they add
and produce a large amplitude; if they arrive out of phase, they subtract and produce a small amplitude. The total amplitude, or intensity,
depends on the phases of the combining waves.
Dennis Gabor, the inventor of holography, was intrigued by the
way in which the photographic image of an object was stored by a
photographic plate but was unable to devote any consistent research
effort to the question until the 1940’s. At that time, Gabor was involved
in the development of the electron microscope. On Easter
morning in 1947, as Gabor was pondering the problem of how to
improve the electron microscope, the solution came to him. He
would attempt to take a poor electron picture and then correct it optically.
The process would require coherent electron beams—that is,
electron waves with a definite phase.
This two-stage method was inspired by the work of Lawrence
Bragg. Bragg had formed the image of a crystal lattice by diffracting
the photographic X-ray diffraction pattern of the original lattice.
This double diffraction process is the basis of the holographic process.
Bragg’s method was limited because of his inability to record
the phase information of the X-ray photograph. Therefore, he could
study only those crystals for which the phase relationship of the reflected
waves could be predicted.
Waiting for the Laser
Gabor devised a way of capturing the phase information after he
realized that adding coherent background to the wave reflected from
an object would make it possible to produce an interference pattern
on the photographic plate. When the phases of the two waves are
identical, a maximum intensity will be recorded; when they are out of
phase, a minimum intensity is recorded. Therefore, what is recorded
in a hologram is not an image of the object but rather the interference
pattern of the two coherent waves. This pattern looks like a collection
of swirls and blank spots. The hologram (or photograph) is then illuminated
by the reference beam, and part of the transmitted light is a
replica of the original object wave. When viewing this object wave,
one sees an exact replica of the original object.
The major impediment at the time in making holograms using
any form of radiation was a lack of coherent sources. For example,
the coherence of the mercury lamp used by Gabor and his assistant IvorWilliams was so short that they were able to make holograms of
only about a centimeter in diameter. The early results were rather
poor in terms of image quality and also had a double image. For this
reason, there was little interest in holography, and the subject lay almost
untouched for more than ten years.
Interest in the field was rekindled after the laser (light amplification
by stimulated emission of radiation) was developed in 1962.
Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks, who were conducting radar research
at the University of Michigan, published the first laser holographs
in 1963. The laser was an intense light source with a very
long coherence length. Its monochromatic nature improved the resolution
of the images greatly. Also, there was no longer any restriction
on the size of the object to be photographed.
The availability of the laser allowed Leith and Upatnieks to propose
another improvement in holographic technique. Before 1964,
holograms were made of only thin transparent objects. A small region
of the hologram bore a one-to-one correspondence to a region
of the object. Only a small portion of the image could be viewed at
one time without the aid of additional optical components. Illuminating
the transparency diffusely allowed the whole image to be
seen at one time. This development also made it possible to record
holograms of diffusely reflected three-dimensional objects. Gabor
had seen from the beginning that this should make it possible to create
three-dimensional images.
After the early 1960’s, the field of holography developed very
quickly. Because holography is different from conventional photography,
the two techniques often complement each other. Gabor saw
his idea blossom into a very important technique in optical science.
Impact
The development of the laser and the publication of the first laser
holograms in 1963 caused a blossoming of the new technique in
many fields. Soon, techniques were developed that allowed holograms
to be viewed with white light. It also became possible for holograms
to reconstruct multicolored images. Holographic methods
have been used to map terrain with radar waves and to conduct surveillance
in the fields of forestry, agriculture, and meteorology.By the 1990’s, holography had become a multimillion-dollar industry,
finding applications in advertising, as an art form, and in security
devices on credit cards, as well as in scientific fields. An alternate
form of holography, also suggested by Gabor, uses sound
waves. Acoustical imaging is useful whenever the medium around
the object to be viewed is opaque to light rays—for example, in
medical diagnosis. Holography has affected many areas of science,
technology, and culture.

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