Volume holographic hyperspectral imaging

Applied Optics
Wenhai LiuDemetri Psaltis

Abstract

A volume hologram has two degenerate Bragg-phase-matching dimensions and provides the capability of volume holographic imaging. We demonstrate two volume holographic imaging architectures and investigate their imaging resolution, aberration, and sensitivity. The first architecture uses the hologram directly as an objective imaging element where strong aberration is observed and confirmed by simulation. The second architecture uses an imaging lens and a transmission geometry hologram to achieve linear two-dimensional optical sectioning and imaging of a four-dimensional (spatial plus spectral dimensions) object hyperspace. Multiplexed holograms can achieve simultaneously three-dimensional imaging of an object without a scanning mechanism.

Citations

Mar 9, 2007·Journal of Biomedical Optics·William R JohnsonGreg Bearman
Jul 29, 2010·Optical Engineering : the Journal of the Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers·Paul J Gelsinger-AustinJose M Castro
Mar 10, 2010·Philosophical Transactions. Series A, Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences·Sergei S OrlovKatepalli R Sreenivasan
Apr 27, 2011·IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence·Xun CaoStephen Lin
Apr 4, 2006·Applied Optics·William R JohnsonGreg Bearman
Jun 1, 2017·Journal of Biomedical Optics·Isela D HowlettRaymond K Kostuk
Oct 4, 2017·Journal of Biomedical Optics·Isela D HowlettRaymond K Kostuk
Mar 29, 2014·Journal of Biomedical Optics·Gabriel V OrsingerMarek Romanowski
Aug 30, 2016·Biomedical Optics Express·Yanlu LvJianwen Luo
Mar 6, 2007·Applied Optics·Tun-Chien TengChing-Cherng Sun
Apr 1, 2018·Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics, Image Science, and Vision·Daniel L Marks, David R Smith
Aug 23, 2018·Optics Express·Sunil VyasYuan Luo

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