Polarization fields

Abstract

We introduce polarization field displays as an optically-efficient design for dynamic light field display using multi-layered LCDs. Such displays consist of a stacked set of liquid crystal panels with a single pair of crossed linear polarizers. Each layer is modeled as a spatially-controllable polarization rotator, as opposed to a conventional spatial light modulator that directly attenuates light. Color display is achieved using field sequential color illumination with monochromatic LCDs, mitigating severe attenuation and moiré occurring with layered color filter arrays. We demonstrate such displays can be controlled, at interactive refresh rates, by adopting the SART algorithm to tomographically solve for the optimal spatially-varying polarization state rotations applied by each layer. We validate our design by constructing a prototype using modified off-the-shelf panels. We demonstrate interactive display using a GPU-based SART implementation supporting both polarization-based and attenuation-based architectures. Experiments characterize the accuracy of our image formation model, verifying polarization field displays achieve increased brightness, higher resolution, and extended depth of field, as compared to existing automultiscopic display methods for dual-layer and multi-layer LCDs.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2011
Source ID
10.1145/2070781.2024220

Entities

People

  • Douglas Lanman
  • Gordon Wetzstein
  • Matthew Hirsch
  • Ramesh Raskar
  • Wolfgang Heidrich

Organizations

  • Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  • Division of Information and Intelligent Systems
  • MIT Media Lab
  • University of British Columbia

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Computer Vision.
  • Human-Computer Interaction (HCI).
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.