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Lensless zoomable holographic projection using scaled Fresnel diffraction: erratum

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Abstract

This erratum amends the lack of important works [P. Ferraro, Opt. Lett. 29, 854 (2004)] and [M. Paturzo, Opt. Express18, 8806 (2010)] for scaled Fresnel diffraction in the reference. In order to magnify the reconstructed image from a hologram,[P. Ferraro, Opt. Lett. 29, 854 (2004)] and [M. Paturzo, Opt. Express18, 8806 (2010)] and [M. Paturzo, Opt. Express18, 8806 (2010)] use zero-padding and resampling of a hologram, respectively.

© 2013 Optical Society of America

This erratum amends the lack of important works [P. Ferraro, Opt. Lett. 29, 854 (2004)] and [M. Paturzo, Opt. Express18, 8806 (2010)] for scaled Fresnel diffraction in the reference. In order to magnify the reconstructed image from a hologram, Refs. [1] and 2 use zero-padding and resampling of a hologram, respectively.

References and links

1. P. Ferraro, S. D. Nicola, G. Coppola, A. Finizio, D. Alfieri, and G. Pierattini, “Controlling image size as a function of distance and wavelength in Fresnel-transform reconstruction of digital holograms,” Opt. Lett. 29, 854–856 (2004). [CrossRef]   [PubMed]  

2. M. Paturzo, P. Memmolo, A. Finizio, R. Näsänen, T. J. Naughton, and P. Ferraro, “Synthesis and display of dynamic holographic 3D scenes with real-world objects,” Opt. Express 18, 8806–8815 (2010). [CrossRef]   [PubMed]  

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