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Holographic

Holographic is an adjective relating to holography, a technique for recording and reconstructing the light field of an object so that the reconstructed image appears three-dimensional. The term derives from hologram, from Greek holo- meaning “whole” and -gram meaning “written.” The method was conceived by Dennis Gabor in 1947 to improve electron microscopy, and its principles were demonstrated with laser light in the early 1960s by Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks.

A hologram records the interference pattern between light reflected by the object (the object wave) and a

Applications of holography include security: holograms are widely used on banknotes, credit cards, and identity documents

In physics, the holographic principle posits that a volume of space can be described by information on

reference
beam.
When
illuminated
by
coherent
light,
the
hologram
diffracts
light
to
recreate
the
original
light
wave,
including
phase
information,
enabling
a
three-dimensional
image
to
be
viewed
from
different
angles.
There
are
transmission
holograms
and
reflection
holograms,
as
well
as
computer-generated
holograms
that
simulate
the
same
principles
using
digital
data.
to
deter
counterfeiting.
In
art,
science,
and
industry,
holography
supports
imaging,
data
storage
research,
interferometry,
and
metrology.
Modern
work
includes
holographic
displays
and
volumetric
or
light-field
displays
designed
to
present
3D
images
without
eyewear,
as
well
as
holographic
microscopy
for
detailed
imaging
of
microscopic
samples.
its
boundary,
linking
theories
of
gravity
in
a
higher-dimensional
space
to
quantum
field
theories
on
the
boundary.
While
influential,
it
remains
a
theoretical
framework
rather
than
a
directly
optical
phenomenon,
derived
from
ideas
in
string
theory
and
quantum
gravity.