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Apr 17

Precision holography for non-conformal branes

We set up precision holography for the non-conformal branes preserving 16 supersymmetries. The near-horizon limit of all such p-brane solutions with p \leq 4, including the case of fundamental string solutions, is conformal to AdS_{p+2} x S^{8-p} with a linear dilaton. We develop holographic renormalization for all these cases. In particular, we obtain the most general asymptotic solutions with appropriate Dirichlet boundary conditions, find the corresponding counterterms and compute the holographic 1-point functions, all in complete generality and at the full non-linear level. The result for the stress energy tensor properly defines the notion of mass for backgrounds with such asymptotics. The analysis is done both in the original formulation of the method and also using a radial Hamiltonian analysis. The latter formulation exhibits most clearly the existence of an underlying generalized conformal structure. In the cases of Dp-branes, the corresponding dual boundary theory, the maximally supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory SYM_{p+1}, indeed exhibits the generalized conformal structure found at strong coupling. We compute the holographic 2-point functions of the stress energy tensor and gluon operator and show they satisfy the expected Ward identities and the constraints of generalized conformal structure. The holographic results are also manifestly compatible with the M-theory uplift, with the asymptotic solutions, counterterms, one and two point functions etc of the IIA F1 and D4 appropriately descending from those of M2 and M5 branes, respectively. We present a few applications including the computation of condensates in Witten's model of holographic YM_4 theory.

  • 3 authors
·
Jul 21, 2008

HoloPASWIN: Robust Inline Holographic Reconstruction via Physics-Aware Swin Transformers

In-line digital holography (DIH) is a widely used lensless imaging technique, valued for its simplicity and capability to image samples at high throughput. However, capturing only intensity of the interference pattern during the recording process gives rise to some unwanted terms such as cross-term and twin-image. The cross-term can be suppressed by adjusting the intensity of reference wave, but the twin-image problem remains. The twin-image is a spectral artifact that superimposes a defocused conjugate wave onto the reconstructed object, severely degrading image quality. While deep learning has recently emerged as a powerful tool for phase retrieval, traditional Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) are limited by their local receptive fields, making them less effective at capturing the global diffraction patterns inherent in holography. In this study, we introduce HoloPASWIN, a physics-aware deep learning framework based on the Swin Transformer architecture. By leveraging hierarchical shifted-window attention, our model efficiently captures both local details and long-range dependencies essential for accurate holographic reconstruction. We propose a comprehensive loss function that integrates frequency-domain constraints with physical consistency via a differentiable angular spectrum propagator, ensuring high spectral fidelity. Validated on a large-scale synthetic dataset of 25,000 samples with diverse noise configurations (speckle, shot, read, and dark noise), HoloPASWIN demonstrates effective twin-image suppression and robust reconstruction quality.

  • 2 authors
·
Mar 5

Fast Autofocusing using Tiny Transformer Networks for Digital Holographic Microscopy

The numerical wavefront backpropagation principle of digital holography confers unique extended focus capabilities, without mechanical displacements along z-axis. However, the determination of the correct focusing distance is a non-trivial and time consuming issue. A deep learning (DL) solution is proposed to cast the autofocusing as a regression problem and tested over both experimental and simulated holograms. Single wavelength digital holograms were recorded by a Digital Holographic Microscope (DHM) with a 10x microscope objective from a patterned target moving in 3D over an axial range of 92 μm. Tiny DL models are proposed and compared such as a tiny Vision Transformer (TViT), tiny VGG16 (TVGG) and a tiny Swin-Transfomer (TSwinT). The proposed tiny networks are compared with their original versions (ViT/B16, VGG16 and Swin-Transformer Tiny) and the main neural networks used in digital holography such as LeNet and AlexNet. The experiments show that the predicted focusing distance Z_R^{Pred} is accurately inferred with an accuracy of 1.2 μm in average in comparison with the DHM depth of field of 15 μm. Numerical simulations show that all tiny models give the Z_R^{Pred} with an error below 0.3 μm. Such a prospect would significantly improve the current capabilities of computer vision position sensing in applications such as 3D microscopy for life sciences or micro-robotics. Moreover, all models reach an inference time on CPU, inferior to 25 ms per inference. In terms of occlusions, TViT based on its Transformer architecture is the most robust.

  • 7 authors
·
Mar 15, 2022