OP - Interaction of Light and Matter - Scattering and Polarisation - Week 2 Flashcards
What happens when changes occur to an electric field?
Changes occur to the corresponding magnetic field.
What happens when light hits an atom?
The electric field induces changes to the electron cloud, causing them to oscillate, resulting in a change to the magnetic field.
Light is then radiated off in all directions (scattered), or dissapated as heat.
What is polarised light?
Light whose electric field is orientated in a specific plane.
Must polarised light always have a planar electric field?
No, it can be radially polarised. Not always a perfect circle, can be eliptical.
Are all photons polarised?
Yes, in unpolarised light, it is really just a mix of randomly polarised light.
Define refractive index.
How much light is attenuated in a transparent medium, resulting in it being x times slower, x is refractive index.
Can refracted light be polarised?
Yes.
Which scatters more easily, shorter or longer wavelengths?
Shorter.
How is light polarised?
Light passes through a parallel grid like structure, in which only one prientation can pass, resulting in polarised light. The rest get absorbed.
Consider a perfect polaroid. How much unpolarised light will it absorb? What orientation of a second filter is needed to get extinction?
50%
Second filter orthogonal to the first results in extinction.
How do sunglasses work? What phenomenon does this rely on?
They absorb horizontally polarised light.
It relies on the fact that light is partially polarised by reflection.
Explain polarisation by reflection, and Brewsters angle.
Brewsters angle is when the reflected beam is 90 degrees to the refracted beam. Results in partially polarised reflected light.
Define Rayleigh scattering vs Mie scattering.
Rayleigh - for when the size is very small
Mie - for when particles are large
Is light polarised by Rayleigh scattering?
Light scattered in the forward and backward direction are completely unpolarised.
Becomes increasingly more polarised as the angle increases.
Orthogonally, light is completely linearly polarised.
Describe the relationship between particle size and backscattering.
Backscattering increases with particle size.