Two Challenges to Holography: 1. Holographic Electron Microscopy; 2. Speckle-Free Illumination.- The Holographic Emulsion Layer as a Three-Dimensional Recording Medium.- 3-D Construction of Imaginary Objects by the Method of Holographic Stereogram.- Optical Aperture Synthesis Producing High Resolution Photographs by Incoherent Superposition of Low-Resolution Partial-Frequency Range Component Photographs.- Imaging with Low-Redundancy Arrays.- Correction of Lens Aberration by Holography.- Optical Transfer Function Measurement by Holographic Techniques.- Applications of Classical Theory of Interferometry to Holography.- Holography Using an Extended Spatially Incoherent Source.- Application of Holographic Interferometry to Mechanical Experiments.- Experimental Aspects of Holographic Interferometry.- Pulsed Laser Holography with TEMoo Mode Ruby Lasers.- Application of Non-Linear Hologram to Interferometry.- Digital Picture Processing and Holography.- Computer Synthesis of Holograms and Spatial Filters.- Pattern Classification Using Correlation with Random Masks - an Optical PAPA Device.- Correlation Techniques by Holography and Its Application to Fingerprint Identification.- Optical Image Deblurring Methods.- Real Time Image Processing.- Radar and Microwave Applications of Holography.- Acoustical Holography.- Proposed Applications of Holographic Technique to the Optics of the Eye and Vision Research.- A High Capacity Holographic Storage System.- Author Index.
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
This book consists primarily of papers presented at the second U.S. Japan Seminar on holography, held in Washington, D.C., from October 20-27, 1969, under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences, National Science Foundation, and the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science.