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Polygon-based computer-generated holography: a review of fundamentals and recent progress [Invited]

In this review paper, we first provide comprehensive tutorials on two classical methods of polygon-based computer-generated holography: the traditional method (also called the fast-Fourier-transform-based method) and the analytical method. Indeed, other modern polygon-based methods build on the idea...

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Published in:Applied optics (2004) 2022-02, Vol.61 (5), p.B363
Main Authors: Zhang, Yaping, Fan, Houxin, Wang, Fan, Gu, Xianfeng, Qian, Xiaofan, Poon, Ting-Chung
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container_issue 5
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container_title Applied optics (2004)
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creator Zhang, Yaping
Fan, Houxin
Wang, Fan
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Qian, Xiaofan
Poon, Ting-Chung
description In this review paper, we first provide comprehensive tutorials on two classical methods of polygon-based computer-generated holography: the traditional method (also called the fast-Fourier-transform-based method) and the analytical method. Indeed, other modern polygon-based methods build on the idea of the two methods. We will then present some selective methods with recent developments and progress and compare their computational reconstructions in terms of calculation speed and image quality, among other things. Finally, we discuss and propose a fast analytical method called the fast 3D affine transformation method, and based on the method, we present a numerical reconstruction of a computer-generated hologram (CGH) of a 3D surface consisting of 49,272 processed polygons of the face of a real person without the use of graphic processing units; to the best of our knowledge, this represents a state-of-the-art numerical result in polygon-based computed-generated holography. Finally, we also show optical reconstructions of such a CGH and another CGH of the Stanford bunny of 59,996 polygons with 31,724 processed polygons after back-face culling. We hope that this paper will bring out some of the essence of polygon-based computer-generated holography and provide some insights for future research.
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subjects Affine transformations
Fourier transforms
Graphics processing units
Holography
Image quality
Image reconstruction
Methods
Polygons
title Polygon-based computer-generated holography: a review of fundamentals and recent progress [Invited]
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