Abstract
In a retinal scanning display an image of a light source is scanned over the retina and at the same time modulated in intensity to form an image. To attain a retinal image most resembling the corresponding original image, the resolution of the modulating graphics board must be at least twice the maximum optical resolution possible. This paper describes how this relationship, which is based on the theorem of Shannon, is derived and what differences in contrast can be observed between the horizontal and the vertical scanning direction. It appears that for a relatively large field of view the resolution of the graphics board is inadequate, so that the maximum optical resolution will have to be decreased.
© 1997 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
Marc von Waldkirch, Paul Lukowicz, and Gerhard Tröster
Opt. Express 11(24) 3220-3233 (2003)
Lantian Mi, Chao Ping Chen, Yifan Lu, Wenbo Zhang, Jie Chen, and Nizamuddin Maitlo
Opt. Express 27(15) 20493-20507 (2019)
Junzhong Liang, David R. Williams, and Donald T. Miller
J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 14(11) 2884-2892 (1997)