Difference between revisions of "Lightfield display"

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A simultaneous light field display is one that displays all of the light all at once.
 
A simultaneous light field display is one that displays all of the light all at once.
  
A light field display that is to solve most [[vergence-accommodation conflict]]s needs to display multiple views for each pupil which can theoretically be done using a [[high angular resolution backlight]].<ref name="q986">{{cite web | title=SD&A 2014 Keynote: Compressive displays| website=YouTube | url=https://www.youtube.com/embed/FO4EzXUmCdo | access-date=2024-07-09}}</ref>
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Light field displays can solve most [[vergence-accommodation conflict]] needs.
  
 
==Microlens-based==
 
==Microlens-based==

Revision as of 07:38, 21 July 2024

A light field display is a display that can display a light field, which is light that a person can focus naturally on at a range of distances in the image. Light field displays can be made to be near the eye or fixed in the world: Either a near eye lightfield display or a world-fixed lightfield display.

The light reaches the viewer from multiple angles at a single viewpoint.

A sequential light field display is a display that generates rays one by one, or in groups one after another, and displays to the eye in rapid succession.

A simultaneous light field display is one that displays all of the light all at once.

Light field displays can solve most vergence-accommodation conflict needs.

Microlens-based

For detail about this topic, visit: Microlens-based light-field display

A light field display can be made by putting a microlens array in front of a traditional flat display.[1] This can be done by taking a laptop computer and putting a microlens sheet in front of it.

Manufacturing

A light field display must be lit. For example using high brightness LEDs. The LEDs can be a broad backlight, or they can be the individual pixels or subpixels themselves.

To manufacture near-eye microlens array-based LFDs, it is recommended to use a large panel of high PPI. The display panel size is recommended to be about 2.5 inches square, with a PPI of over 2000. This results in a recommended resolution of 5000x5000 per eye.

Instead of using high-PPI displays, it is also feasible to use fiber optic image conduits to transport light from a physically larger and high resolution display in a flexible way to a head-mounted apparatus, where microlensing can take place for light field generation.

References