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Slim-panel holographic video display

Authors :
Ho-Jung Kim
Hong-Seok Lee
Jong-Young Hong
Chil-Sung Choi
Alexander Morozov
Sungwoo Hwang
Young Yun Kim
Kanghee Won
Jungkwuen An
Juwon Seo
Yunhee Kim
Hoon Song
Yongkyu Kim
Sunghoon Hong
Hyunsik Park
Kichul Kim
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2020), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2020.

Abstract

Since its discovery almost 70 years ago, the hologram has been considered to reproduce the most realistic three dimensional images without visual side effects. Holographic video has been extensively researched for commercialization, since Benton et al. at MIT Media Lab developed the first holographic video systems in 1990. However, commercially available holographic video displays have not been introduced yet for several reasons: narrow viewing angle, bulky optics and heavy computing power. Here we present an interactive slim-panel holographic video display using a steering-backlight unit and a holographic video processor to solve the above issues. The steering-backlight unit enables to expand the viewing angle by 30 times and its diffractive waveguide architecture makes a slim display form-factor. The holographic video processor computes high quality holograms in real-time on a single-chip. We suggest that the slim-panel holographic display can provide realistic three-dimensional video in office and household environments.<br />Holographic displays that are both compact and produce realistic holograms without eyestrain are still difficult to realize. Here the authors implement a steering-backlight unit and a holographic video processor to produce a realistic holographic display in a slim panel.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....070539a51044ed9af5938c5bddfa02c3