This text presents a collection of papers on holographic recording materials. It covers topics such as: film-grain noise on wavefront-reconstruction imaging; production of blazed holograms; reversal bleaching for low flare light on holograms; and red sensitivity of dichomated gelatin films.
An important feature of computer generated holograms (CGHs) is to create wavefronts that may be defined only mathematically. Since A. W. Lohmann and his colleagues invented CGHs in 1966 for spatial filtering in image processing, the applications of CGHs have multiplied to include 3-D display, optical testing, diffractive/binary optics, bifocal intraocular lenses, wavefront transformations for material processing, pickup heads for optical disks, focal plane array detection, coherent laser addition, beam steering, and optical interconnects for parallel computing and neural computing. Today, the applications of CGHs continue to expand. This book features a selection of papers that examine different aspects of the development of CGHs from the 1960s through 1990, because there is no substitute for reading the original papers on any subject, even if that subject is mature enough to have many single-aspect monographs and textbooks. It is hoped that this selection of papers will be valuable additions to many working libraries on this expanding, expansive subject.
This volume contains 92 papers on VUV synchrotron radiation instrumentation. Areas addressed include: high resolution X-ray spectroscopy using synchrotron radiation; the classical radiation of accelerated electrons; and the design of holographic concave gratings for Seya-Namioka monochromators.