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volumephase

Volumephase is a term encountered in wave physics and imaging to denote the spatially varying phase of a coherent wave field within a volumetric medium. Unlike a two-dimensional phase map defined on a surface, volumephase refers to a phase function φ(r) where r = (x, y, z) specifies position inside the volume. The phase encodes the accumulated optical path length through the medium and depends on the refractive-index distribution n(r).

In a monochromatic setting with vacuum wavelength λ, the phase at a point along a propagation path

Volumephase plays a role in several areas, including volumetric phase imaging, three-dimensional holography, optical tomography, and

The term volumephase is not universally standardized and may be used variably in the literature to describe

can
be
expressed
as
φ(r)
=
φ0
+
(2π/λ)
∫
n(r(s))
ds,
where
the
integral
is
taken
along
the
ray
path
from
a
reference
point
to
r.
In
heterogeneous
media,
the
phase
variation
reflects
both
the
geometry
of
the
path
and
local
variations
of
refractive
index.
In
discrete
or
computational
models,
φ
is
represented
on
a
3D
grid
and
updated
through
numerical
integration
or
reconstruction
algorithms.
adaptive
optics.
In
these
contexts,
the
goal
is
often
to
reconstruct
the
three-dimensional
phase
distribution
from
intensity
or
interferometric
measurements,
which
can
require
phase
retrieval,
phase
unwrapping,
or
tomographic
reconstruction
methods.
Measurement
approaches
include
digital
holography,
interferometry,
and
wavefront
sensing,
often
coupled
with
computational
techniques
to
obtain
a
consistent
3D
phase
map.
volumetric
phase
structures
or
three-dimensional
phase
analyses.
Related
concepts
include
optical
path
length,
phase
map,
phase
front,
and
volumetric
imaging.