Top Banner
LASERS AND HOLOGRAMS
14

Lasers and Holograms

Feb 22, 2016

Download

Documents

Linus

Lasers and Holograms. What does LASER stand for?. LASER is short for L ight A mplification by S timulated E mission of R adiation Lasers are constantly around us DVDs, laser shows, medical (laser surgery), laser sight. Properties of lasers. Laser light is DIRECTIONAL - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Lasers and Holograms

LASERS AND HOLOGRAMS

Page 2: Lasers and Holograms

What does LASER stand for?LASER is short for Light Amplification by StimulatedEmission of RadiationLasers are constantly around us

DVDs, laser shows, medical (laser surgery), laser sight.

Page 3: Lasers and Holograms

Properties of lasers Laser light is DIRECTIONAL

Is strong and concentrated Flashlights are much weaker.

the light is COHERENT Each wavelength is in unison with the

others...think of the British (laser light) vs. Minutemen (flashlight)

The laser lights are all organzied and together. The flashlights are running all over the

place...unorganzied

Page 4: Lasers and Holograms

Origins Theodore Maiman invented the first laser

in 1960. (ruby laser) The idea of stimulated emission was

theorized first by the non-other Albert Einstein.

Page 5: Lasers and Holograms

ORGANIZED (LASER) RANDOM (FLASHLIGHT)

Page 6: Lasers and Holograms

How do lasers work?A laser is activated by a few photons. These active photons cause more and more photons to get “excited” and thus creating a laser beam. Laser beams are usually the same color as opposed to light.

Page 7: Lasers and Holograms

Laser TV technology When you watch an average tv today,

you can only see 30-35% of the ACTUAL color content

New developments in laser technology will allow you to see 90% of color content!

Cheaper as well.

Page 8: Lasers and Holograms

Military LasersLaser weapons are just now reaching the battlefield. Researchers at the pentagon recently got 105KW of power out of their laser. This paves the way for energy weapons to be the newest destructive force on the battlefield.

Page 9: Lasers and Holograms

LASER TAG!!!!!!!Uses coded lasers to track how many

points you get.

Page 10: Lasers and Holograms

Holograms Holography, a term used to describe the

study of holograms, is is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same place where it was recorded.

The image produced is changed exactly as the postion of the viewing system changes, thus producing a three dimensional image.

Page 11: Lasers and Holograms

History of Holograms Holograms were first discovered by a physicist

named Dennis Gabor. He came upon the hologram as he was searching for ways to improve the electron microscope.

In 1962, the first optical hologram was created at the University of Michigan by Emmett Leith and Juris Upatneiks.

They created several types of holograms. The first and most simple hologram they created was called a transmission hologram which used lasers to record the object. The second type of hologram was called the rainbow transmission hologram. These are most commonly seen on objects such as credit cards.

Page 12: Lasers and Holograms

Interference and Diffraction

HOLOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTION PROCESS A photographic plate

(metal plate with slits in it) is placed at an angle to the 3-D object being hologramed.

The laser beams that are shot toward the object are bent and reflected toward the photographic plate.

The angles at which the lasers hit the photographic plate deterimine the shape of the object to be hologramed later.

Page 13: Lasers and Holograms

Holograms of Complex Objects

To record a complex object, the laser beam is first split into two beams using a beam splitter.

One of the beams illuminates the object (reflecting the object onto the recording medium), while the other beam illuminates the recording medium directly.

Page 14: Lasers and Holograms