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Recent "holography" articles

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Emerging Holography
Joshua Erlich, Graham Kribs, and Ian Low
Posted by jelynn to J. Erlich holography on Mon Dec 29 2008 at 20:33 UTC | info | related
 
QCD and a Holographic Model of Hadrons
Joshua Erlich et al.
 
Holographic Electroweak Symmetry Breaking from D-branes
Christopher Carone, Joshua Erlich, and Marc Sher
 
Holographic Bosonic Technicolor
Christopher Carone, Joshua Erlich, and Jong Tan
 
On two-point correlation functions in AdS/QCD
A Krikun
 
Magnetic Microstructure of Magnetotactic Bacteria by Electron Holography
Rafal E. Dunin-Borkowski et al.
Science 282 (5395), 1868-70 (04 Dec 1998)
 
Cisco On-Stage TelePresence Experience
CiscoZine, (18 Sep 2008)
Have you ever seen a sci-fi movie where object and people were represented through holography? Now, this technology is no more sci-fi! The system uses a high-definition camera to shoot scenes and a high-definition projector with a special screen. The ‘Cisco On-Stage TelePresence Experience’ was an ambitious collaboration between Cisco and Musion Systems, which took place during the opening of Cisco’s Globalization Centre East in Bangalore, India.
 
MIT Holography Museum
web.mit.edu
Posted by pviele to Pat's picks holography on Wed Apr 09 2008 at 16:57 UTC | info | related
 
Femtosecond time-delay X-ray holography
Henry Chapman et al.
Nature 448 (7154), 676-9 (09 Aug 2007)
Extremely intense and ultrafast X-ray pulses from free-electron lasers offer unique opportunities to study fundamental aspects of complex transient phenomena in materials. Ultrafast time-resolved methods usually require highly synchronized pulses to initiate a transition and then probe it after a precisely defined time delay. In the X-ray regime, these methods are challenging because they require complex optical systems and diagnostics. Here we propose and apply a simple holographic measurement scheme, inspired by Newton?s ?dusty mirror? experiment1, to monitor the X-ray-induced explosion of microscopic objects. The sample is placed near an X-ray mirror; after the pulse traverses the sample, triggering the reaction, it is reflected back onto the sample by the mirror to probe this reaction. The delay is encoded in the resulting diffraction pattern to an accuracy of one femtosecond, and the structural change is holographically recorded with high resolution. We apply the technique to monitor the dynamics of polystyrene spheres in intense free-electron-laser pulses, and observe an explosion occurring well after the initial pulse. Our results support the notion that X-ray flash imaging2, 3 can be used to achieve high resolution, beyond radiation damage limits for biological samples4. With upcoming ultrafast X-ray sources we will be able to explore the three-dimensional dynamics of materials at the timescale of atomic motion.
 
Electron Holography: A New View of Material Structure
www.ornl.gov
Posted by templus to holography electron on Mon Jun 25 2007 at 16:06 UTC | info | related

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