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Making Holograms In The Kitchen

Paul writes "Over at www.litiholo.com is a newly launched hologram kit that lets you make your own holograms at home. No, it's not Princess Leia asking you for help, but it's still pretty cool making a hologram on your kitchen table. Particularly interesting is the instant hologram film that makes holograms with no developing (kind of a Polaroid film for holograms). The hologram kit costs $99, including the laser, film, and everything else."

18 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. There's already a great book on making holographs by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can get it from Amazon. It's Shoebox Holography

  2. Edmund Scientific by maynard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Has sold holography kits for years. Currently they have a book Showbox Holography which shows how to set up a small lab to shoot holograms with a pen diode laser. They used to have a neat kit with a HeNe laser back in the day, but it wern't no $100 bucks. *cough* I haven't looked at an Edmund Scientific catalog for over a decade, but they seem to have shifted from the home hobby lab market to strictly the teaching market... shame. --M

    1. Re:Edmund Scientific by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The home hobby branch of the company lives on here:
      http://scientificsonline.com/

  3. Better kits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I am not totally sure, but I think the kits sold at the linked site require the use of a laser to view the hologram, they are not white-light holograms. Instead you might wanna check out this site and their hologram kits, I plan on purchasing the Standard Kit. http://www.holokits.com

  4. ummm by Glog · · Score: 1, Informative

    Judging from the submitter's email address this is a shameless plug for a product. What, no real news today?

  5. Re:There's already a great book on making holograp by arbi · · Score: 5, Informative

    Note that the author of the article "Paul" is associated with the company (based on his email address). But at least he's honest in not trying to hide that info.

  6. Re:Photos? by Jason1729 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is ordinary film (in a sheet film format, I used to use black and white 4x5" film that's about $1/sheet in 25 packs.

    Basically, to make a hologram you start with a single source of monochromatic and in phase light (a laser), split the beam into two so they will still be in phase and at the same frequency. Then use one beam to illuminate the film directly (referrence beam) and the other to illuminate the object and then the film after bouncing off the object (subject beam).

    The result is that you create an interference pattern of lightwaves on the film, and depending on the shape of the object, the waves in the subject beam are delayed by various amounts.

    The result is that when light passes through this interference pattern on the film, it forms a real (3D) image of the original object that caused the interferrence pattern.

    Jason
    ProfQuotes

  7. Re:(sniff) farewell my misspent youth. by Jason1729 · · Score: 4, Informative

    This kit uses a laser diode, not a NeNe laser. As far as I know the laser diodes just aren't as good. They also use some sort of instant film, which has its perks; I don't have the time to spend in the darkroom anymore, but I'll believe the quality when I see it, though I am quite interested in seeing it. I wonder if anyone who doesn't have fond memories of making holograms would be at all interested in this kit. It seems to me like more of a nostalgia thing like tbose old video games than a cool new thing.

    Jason
    ProfQuotes

  8. Re:(sniff) farewell my misspent youth. by sploxx · · Score: 4, Informative

    This kit uses a laser diode, not a NeNe laser. As far as I know the laser diodes just aren't as good.
    Yes, laser diodes have a much shorter coherence length than HeNe's, in the order of 10-20cm whereas a HeNe can easily reach coherence lengths in the tens of kilometers range.
    The coherence length of a light source determines the maximum path length difference between two beams for which you can still get interference.

    It is important for holography since the whole process relies on interfering two beams in the plane of the holographic plate.

    But if you carefully adjust the path lengths of both the object and the reference beam (by putting delay lines into your setup - you can simply build them out of two additional mirrors, for example...), you can surely make holograms out of small objects with a diode laser.

  9. Coherence Length? by goombah99 · · Score: 4, Informative
    What is the coherence Length of a laser diode? Typically the coherence length of a laser scales with Q of the cavity and the length of the cavity; in effect average round-trip path length inside the laser made by a single photon. This is why large high-q systems like He Ne's worked well for making holograms: they had long coherence lengths.

    why do you want long coherence lengths? because you need to make sure that at every point on the film the path lenth difference between every ray you want to capture and the reference beam is within the coherence length. As a starting point one would say that at a minumim it should not be less than the width of the film or the width/depth/height of the object or scene which ever is greater.

    Looking at thepicture of the kit, the film and object are many times the cavity size of the a typical internal cavity diode laser. And dhiode lasers have sucky coherence normally.

    are there some clever ways of lighting a scene that can minimize the coherence length requirements?

    I note that the systemin use is a single frequency hologram not a white light hologram. thus the play back has to be done by a monochromatic light source. It must be the arrangement they are using is not a thick film hologram but a thin film hologram.

    any ideas on the geometry they are using and how they are handling the coherence length issue???

    --
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  10. ++informative by maynard · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is basically accurate for a projection hologram. Only quibble is that I would add that during projection one must use the same wavelength laser as was used to shoot the original hologram. Best if it's the same laser, especially if we're talking HeNe here as the number of coil windings can shift output wavelength slightly from one laser to the next. Actually, never having shot a hologram with a diode laser, I have no idea if that's still a concern... --M

  11. Re:not viewable in ambient light by casehardened · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's because transmission holograms only work with monochromatic light. So a "special" flashlight would be one with a color filter. Note that it doesn't have to be the same color, either - using a different probe wavelength will rescale the image, but it'll still be visible.

  12. Re:not viewable in ambient light by sploxx · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are several types of holograms. The traditional one, AFAIK the first one produced by Gabor, the inventor of holography (BTW... he originally invented holography to make better electron microscopes and not pretty 3D "pictures" :) was a transmission hologram.

    For a transmission type hologram, you split your laser light into two beams, one directly hits the holographic plate and the other one bounces off the object and hits the plate afterwards.
    To reconstruct this type of hologram, you need laser light (or light with similar coherence features).

    The white light hologram (? "Weisslichthologramm" in german) is even simpler to make and can be reconstructed in white light from a point source.
    By positioning the object behind the plate, the part of the beam that is transmitted through the plate hits the object and interferes with the incoming wave in the plate. This type of hologram can be reconstructed in white light because parallel interference stripes form in the plate which act as a colour filter. "The hologram makes the light the way it wants it to be... ;)"

  13. Already been discussed over at HF by eric434 · · Score: 3, Informative

    We've been discussing the Liti 'instant hologram' film over at HolographyForum for awhile. The big downside is that these are transmission holograms, and are therefore quite a bit harder to view than reflection holograms. On the other hand, self-developing film is very cool -- normally, you need to develop holograms in a fashion quite similar to photographic prints.

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  14. Re:Misleadingness by ryanmfw · · Score: 1, Informative

    Jeez, you're stupid. That's *not* how it works. Obviously you're of no use to society since all you can do is complain about how stupid people are, and then tell them the *wrong* thing, and mock them for *their* stupidity. No, you do not even have a clue as to what a hologram is. What you are talking about is common, but it is *not* a hologram. For the grandparent poster(not you, you're too stupid):It's a 3d picture that is stored in a 2d film. The 2d film actually stores the interference pattern created between the source laser beam and the source laser beam reflected off of the object the hologram is being made of. That's not precise, I'd recommend checking the wikipedia on this.

    --
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  15. Re:not viewable in ambient light by imsabbel · · Score: 2, Informative

    Errr, you get that wrong.
    This type of hologram (didnt rtfa, but sounds like a amplitude one) needs parallel light in the wavelenght used to create them. So i guess the "special flashlight" is simply a led-light.

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  16. Re:(sniff) farewell my misspent youth. by shostiru · · Score: 2, Informative
    Actually a laser diode is more than adequate, often better than HeNe (probably because there's a lot of crappy HeNe tubes going around), but you need to test out the pointers in the store before buying. Boosting the power a bit helps (be *very* careful, it doesn't take much to burn out a diode), as does dropping some cash on a higher powered diode.

    Holoworld has a lot of info on laser diodes.

  17. Re:there was... by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can buy LED packs which attach along the length of a spoke on your bike. You can configure it to display patterns, or you can give it a message. Excellent idea, and would be really cool to expand into a real 3d volume.

    There are also wand clocks, which do similar, but are like a musical metronome.

    Both of these I believe roughly fit the bill of what your talking about.

    Couple of links

    Spokes: http://www.hokeyspokes.com/designs.shtml

    Clock: http://www.peats.com/cgi-bin/shop/db.cgi?view=1&id =7564&type=6&path=15x5937x5939

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