1987 Gordon Research Conference on Holography and Optical Information Processing

1987 Gordon Research Conference on Holography and Optical Information Processing
Author: Gordon Research Conference
Publisher:
Total Pages: 13
Release: 1987
Genre:
ISBN:

The field of Holography and Optical Information Processing is an important and active one with many significant advances during the past twenty years. This conference had 19 formal talks describing the most recent areas of interest. The conference contained a carefully selected mixture of talks including optical computing, components and architectures; optical processors; holography; and applications of coherent light.

Gordon Research Conference on Optical Signal Processing and Holography Held at the Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA on June 27 - July 2, 1993

Gordon Research Conference on Optical Signal Processing and Holography Held at the Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA on June 27 - July 2, 1993
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 4
Release: 1993
Genre:
ISBN:

Topics discussed included: (1) Digital-optical computing; (2) Optical neural networks; (3) Novel transform techniques; (4) Optical memories; (5) Pseudodeep holography: (6) Bacterio Rhodopsin thin films: (7) Photorefractive material; (8) electro-optic devices; and (9) Photopolymer holography.

Holographic Visions

Holographic Visions
Author: Sean F. Johnston
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 541
Release: 2006-04-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0191513881

Holography exploded on the scientific world in 1964, but its slow fuse had been burning much longer. Over the next four decades, the echoes of that explosion reached scientists, engineers, artists and popular culture. Emerging from classified military research, holography evolved to represent the power of post-war physics, an aesthetic union of art and science, the countercultural meanderings of holism, a cottage industry for waves of would-be entrepreneurs and a fertile plot device for science fiction. New working cultures sprang up to mutate holography, redefining its products, reshaping its audiences and reconceiving its applications. The outcomes included ever more sublime holograms and exquisitely sensitive measuring techniques - but also priority disputes, prurience and poisonous business rivalries. New subjects cross intellectual borders, and so do their explanations. This book draws on the history and philosophy of science and technology, social studies, politics and cultural history to trace the trajectory of holography. The result is an in-depth account of how new science emerges. Based on unprecedented interviews with pioneer holographers and extensive archival research, it reveals how science, technology, art and wider culture are entwined in the modern world.