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