polarisation Flashcards

1
Q

polarisation by reflection

A
  • unpolarised light will resolve into two perpendicular components when incident on a flat surface
  • when the reflected wave is perpendicular to the refracted wave, light that is specularly reflected is place-polarised in the plane of surface
  • incident angle that cause plane-polarisation is referred to as Brewster’s angle
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2
Q

polarisation by transmission

A
  • Results from having conducting material consisting of fine grid arranged either vertically or horizontally
  • Light traveling parallel to the absorption axis is absorbed. Light travelling parallel to the transmission axis is transmitted as polarised light
  • Polaroid sunglasses with vertical transmission axis does not transmit horizontally plane polarised light reflected at Brewster’s angle from flat horizontal surfaces
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3
Q

polarisation by refraction

A
  • Occurs when light passes through an anisotropic material
  • Results in different refractive index and absorption strength in different directions
  • Different polarisation component travels at different speed
  • Results in two rays and forms two images
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4
Q

polarisation by scattering

A
  • Occurs when light hits any material (non-homogenous) and scatters
  • It results scattered light to become either completely or partially polarised
  • Scattered light perpendicular to the incident light is completely polarised
  • As angle varies, polarisation decreases
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