Nature Communications (Apr 2024)

Neural étendue expander for ultra-wide-angle high-fidelity holographic display

  • Ethan Tseng,
  • Grace Kuo,
  • Seung-Hwan Baek,
  • Nathan Matsuda,
  • Andrew Maimone,
  • Florian Schiffers,
  • Praneeth Chakravarthula,
  • Qiang Fu,
  • Wolfgang Heidrich,
  • Douglas Lanman,
  • Felix Heide

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46915-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Holographic displays can generate light fields by dynamically modulating the wavefront of a coherent beam of light using a spatial light modulator, promising rich virtual and augmented reality applications. However, the limited spatial resolution of existing dynamic spatial light modulators imposes a tight bound on the diffraction angle. As a result, modern holographic displays possess low étendue, which is the product of the display area and the maximum solid angle of diffracted light. The low étendue forces a sacrifice of either the field-of-view (FOV) or the display size. In this work, we lift this limitation by presenting neural étendue expanders. This new breed of optical elements, which is learned from a natural image dataset, enables higher diffraction angles for ultra-wide FOV while maintaining both a compact form factor and the fidelity of displayed contents to human viewers. With neural étendue expanders, we experimentally achieve 64 × étendue expansion of natural images in full color, expanding the FOV by an order of magnitude horizontally and vertically, with high-fidelity reconstruction quality (measured in PSNR) over 29 dB on retinal-resolution images.