Entries tagged as HologramsRelated tags feis hologram holograms holography irish dance arduino automation Computers lab Lab Notes Lasers lasers & holography Arty Stuff framing labcast lotr military musings news onenote podcast publications reviews snoopy star wars tech travel Tutorials cape may ceili ceili dance comhaltas dance irish irish music lab notes lochrann's lochranns music new york pub rehoboth scma scottish dance set set dance Holography lasers melt snow jealousy tutorialsSaturday, April 19. 2008Woot!Saturday, April 19. 2008Comments (0) Trackback (1) Hologram entryFriday, April 18. 2008Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Gettin' ready for the feisThe Bluebonnet Feis that is. What am I doing? Not dancing this time. I'm entering this... Continue reading "Gettin' ready for the feis"Monday, January 28. 2008Table testing HadesFor what seems like forever now, I've been working on developing a DCG process for myself that I could use when making white-light copies of my silver masters. After some inconsistent results I stripped the table top of all components and set up an interferometer to see how stable the table was.
Continue reading "Table testing Hades" Saturday, November 24. 2007Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Holograms under a microscopeWhile giving a talk about holography to a school group recently I mentioned that one could look at a hologram through a microscope and see what you'd see with the original subject. Since I've got an Intel QX3 microscope I decided to capture a few images. Continue reading "Holograms under a microscope"Tuesday, September 25. 2007Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) VRP-M Lessons Learned
For almost two months now, I've been working to figure out the exposure and processing steps to use in order to get bright and clean transmission holograms using my Coherent 315M and VRP-M film. After blowing through roughly 68 pieces of film (mostly 1.5x1" in size) I think I've finally nailed the process to use for transmission masters. Continue reading "VRP-M Lessons Learned"Thursday, September 13. 2007Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Experimenting with delayed development
I normally develop right after exposure but did the following test to find out how VRP-M behaves. Continue reading "Experimenting with delayed development"Sunday, August 19. 2007Holography Labcast
I've been trying to get good results with the coherent 315 laser and VRP-M film and haven't had any luck. In each case where I've gotten any kind of image, it's been extremely dim. Unfortunately I found that my shutter was causing a full seconds worth of ringing in the table and had to build a new shutter. That was completed yesterday and this morning I'm doing some more exposure and development tests. My apologies for the sound quality. Next time I'll have to make sure the microphone is closer to me at all times. Without further ado, here's my labcast. Let me know if you'd like me to do more of these. Saturday, August 18. 2007Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Interferometry in GreenWell, it turns out that one of the problems I was having with my green laser and the VRP-M film is my shutter. When it opened it set the table to ringing for at least a full second. My 2-4 second exposures were incredibly dim because they were getting fogged for the first second. I found this out after setting up an interferometer (shown above, click for a larger picture) opening and closing the shutter while it was going. The fringes really moved when the shutter closed but as no light would have been reaching the film, I didn't care about that. Have it shake the table when opening was a problem though. I tried all sorts of things to improve the isolation of the shutter and damp the vibrations it was putting out but in the end I had to give up and make a shutter from scratch. I took a panel meter and attached a multi-layered piece of aluminum foil and used that reflect the incoming beam and create a beam dump on the inner surface of the meter housing. Painting the whole thing black created a nice little box to keep the beam in. After putting a couple of beads of silicone where the meter arm rests against the coil I ended up with a nice quiet shutter that didn't disturb the fringes at all. It's being put through its first hologram-making test right now. Thursday, August 16. 2007Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Using holograms to diagnose astigmatism
Laser Focus World is reporting that researchers at New South Wales University have developed a holographic astigmatism test that's faster to use than the lens-flipping "how does the chart look now?" test we've all endured when having our eyes checked.
Unfortunately there's no additional information at the university site. Perhaps they'll put something up soon. Optics.org has a bit more information and a few extra photos available. |
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