Essay/Term paper: Holograms
Essay, term paper, research paper: Science Reports
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Holograms
      Toss a pebble in a pond -see the  ripples?   Now  drop  two pebbles close
together.  Look at what happens when the  two  sets of waves combine -you get a
new wave!  When a crest and a  trough meet,  they cancel out and the water goes
flat.  When two  crests meet, they produce one,  bigger crest.  When two troughs
collide, they make a single,  deeper trough.  Believe it or  not,   you've just
found a key to understanding how a hologram works.  But what do waves  in  a
pond  have  to  do  with  those  amazing  three-dimensional pictures?  How do
waves make a hologram look like the real thing?
      It all starts with light.  Without it,  you can't see.  And much like the
ripples in a pond,  light travels in  waves.   When you look at, say, an apple,
what you really see are the waves of light reflected from it.  Your  two  eyes
each  see  a  slightly different view of the apple.   These  different  views
tell  you about the apple's depth -its form and where it sits  in  relation to
other objects.  Your brain processes this information so  that you see the apple,
 and the rest of the world,  in 3-D.  You  can look around objects,  too -if the
apple is blocking the  view  of an orange behind it,  you can just move your
head  to  one  side. The apple seems to "move" out of the  way  so  you  can
see  the orange or even the back of  the  apple.   If  that  seems  a  bit
obvious,   just  try  looking  behind  something  in  a   regular photograph!
You can't,  because the photograph  can't  reproduce the infinitely complicated
waves of light reflected  by  objects; the lens of a camera can only focus those
waves into a flat,  2-D image.  But a hologram can capture a 3-D image so
lifelike  that you can look around the image of the apple to an  orange  in  the
background -and it's all thanks to  the  special  kind  of  light waves produced
by a laser.
        "Normal" white light from the  sun  or  a  lightbulb  is  a combination
of every colour of light in the spectrum -a  mush  of different waves that's
useless for holograms.  But a laser shines light in a thin, intense beam that's
just one colour.  That means laser light waves are uniform and in step.  When
two laser  beams intersect,  like two sets of ripples meeting  in  a  pond,
they produce a single new wave pattern:  the hologram.  Here's how  it happens:
Light coming from a laser  is  split  into  two  beams, called the object beam
and the reference beam.  Spread by  lenses and bounced off a mirror,  the object
beam hits the apple.  Light waves reflect from the apple towards a  photographic
film.   The reference beam heads straight to the  film  without  hitting  the
apple.  The two sets of waves meet and create a new wave  pattern that hits the
film and exposes it.  On the film all you  can  see is a mass of dark and light
swirls  -it  doesn't  look  like  an apple at all!  But shine the laser
reference  beam  through  the film once more and the pattern of swirls bends the
light  to  re-create the original reflection waves from the apple -exactly.
        Not all holograms work this way -some use plastics  instead of
photographic film,  others are visible in normal  light.   But all holograms are
created with lasers -and new waves.
All Thought Up and No Place to Go
        Holograms were invented  in  1947  by  Hungarian  scientist Dennis Gabor,
but they were ignored for years.  Why?  Like  many great ideas,  Gabor's theory
about light waves was ahead  of  its time.  The lasers needed to produce clean
waves -and  thus  clean 3-D images -weren't invented until 1960.  Gabor coined
the  name for his photographic technique from holos and gramma,  Greek  for "the
whole message. " But for more than a decade,  Gabor had only half the words.
Gabor's contribution to science  was  recognized at last in 1971 with a Nobel
Prize.  He's got a chance for a last laugh, too.  A perfect holographic portrait
of the late scientist looking up from his  desk  with  a  smile  could  go  on
fooling viewers into saying hello forever.  Actor  Laurence  Olivier  has also
achieved that kind of immortality  -a  hologram  of  the  80 year-old can be
seen these days on the stage  in  London,   in  a musical called Time.
New Waves
        When it comes to looking at the future uses of  holography, pictures are
anything but the whole picture.   Here  are  just  a couple of the more unusual
possibilities.  Consider this:  you're in a windowless room in the  middle  of
an  office  tower,   but you're reading by the light of the noonday sun!  How
can this be? A new invention that incorporates holograms into  widow  glazings
makes it possible.  Holograms can bend light to create complex 3-D images,  but
they can also simply  redirect  light  rays.   The window glaze holograms could
focus  sunlight  coming  through  a window into a narrow beam,  funnel  it  into
an  air  duct  with reflective walls above the ceiling and send it down the
hall  to your windowless cubbyhole.  That could  cut  lighting  costs  and
conserve energy.  The holograms could even  guide  sunlight  into the gloomy
gaps between city skyscrapers and since they can  bend light of different colors
in different directions,  they could be used to filter out  the  hot  infrared
light  rays  that  stream through your car windows to bake you on summer days.
        Or,  how about holding an entire library  in  the  palm  of your hand?
Holography makes it theoretically possible.  Words or pictures could be
translated into a  code  of  alternating  light and dark spots and stored in an
unbelievably tiny space.   That's because light waves are very,  very skinny.
You could lay  about 1000 lightwaves side by side across the width of  the
period  at the end of this sentence.  One calculation holds  that  by  using
holograms,  the U. S.  Library of Congress could be stored in the space of a
sugar cube.  For now, holographic data storage remains little more than a
fascinating idea because the materials  needed to do the job haven't been
invented yet.   But  it's  clear  that holograms,   which  author  Isaac  Asimov
called  "the  greatest advance in imaging since the eye" will continue to make
waves  in the world of science.
 
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