HoloBeam: Paper-Thin Near-Eye Displays
Kaan Ak\c{s}it, Yuta Itoh

TL;DR
HoloBeam introduces ultra-thin near-eye displays using holographic projection, achieving high resolution and wide field of view while maintaining a minimal form factor, advancing the design of slim AR glasses.
Contribution
This work presents a novel holographic projection system that significantly reduces AR glasses thickness and enhances resolution and field of view compared to prior beaming displays.
Findings
Achieved submillimeter AR glasses thickness
Demonstrated near retinal resolution of 24 cycles per degree
Provided a wide 70-degree field of view
Abstract
An emerging alternative to conventional Augmented Reality (AR) glasses designs, Beaming displays promise slim AR glasses free from challenging design trade-offs, including battery-related limits or computational budget-related issues. These beaming displays remove active components such as batteries and electronics from AR glasses and move them to a projector that projects images to a user from a distance (1-2 meters), where users wear only passive optical eyepieces. However, earlier implementations of these displays delivered poor resolutions (7 cycles per degree) without any optical focus cues and were introduced with a bulky form-factor eyepiece (50 mm thick). This paper introduces a new milestone for beaming displays, which we call HoloBeam. In this new design, a custom holographic projector populates a micro-volume located at some distance (1-2 meters) with multiple planes of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Optical Imaging Technologies · Interactive and Immersive Displays · Tactile and Sensory Interactions
