Light field (LF) displays can offer a quasi-natural three-dimensional (3D) viewing experience by tailoring the four-dimensional light information. However, the primary drawback of conventional LF displays is their limited image quality due to restricted information. To address this limitation, time-multiplexing techniques are employed, but the resulting system configurations are often impractical for achieving compact systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe polarization aberrations of a fold mirror can be compensated by orienting a second fold mirror's p-polarization with the first mirror's s-polarization. This crossed-mirror configuration compensates the polarization for a single angle to zero and leaves a linear variation of diattenuation and retardance for a spherical wavefront. Two sets of crossed fold mirrors when properly oriented compensate the remaining linear variation and leave a much reduced quadratic variation in a large compensated field of view.
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