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Physics 228 Today: Polarization, Scattering Website: Sakai 01:750:228 or www.physics.rutgers.edu/ugrad/228 First exam (Thursday, Feb 28, 9:40 PM) room assignments TBD, but rooms Physics Lecture Hall (here) and ARC 103. Please bring: 1 formula sheet (both sides may be used, handwritten or computer generated or photocopied all are OK), pencils, erasers, a calculator, and a working brain. There will be: 16 questions, multiple choice, about 4 each from chapters 33-36. About 1/2 direct calculation, 1/4 harder calculation, 1/4 conceptual Monday, February 18, 2013 Linear Polarization Polarization refers to the orientation of the electric (and magnetic) fields of a light wave. For a wave moving to +z, we have written: y B � E(z, t) = E0 cos(kz − ωt)x̂ E � t) = B0 cos(kz − ωt)ŷ B(z, x But the orientation of the fields could be different. For example: � t) = E0 cos(kz − ωt)ŷ E(z, or � t) = −B0 cos(kz − ωt)x̂ B(z, (x̂ + ŷ) � t) = E0 cos(kz − ωt) √ E(z, 2 (ŷ − x̂) � t) = B0 cos(kz − ωt) √ B(z, 2 y E B x B y E and B must be perpendicular, but can be in any direction. (Or rotate the coordinate system.) Monday, February 18, 2013 E x Circular Polarization The polarization direction does not have to be fixed - it can rotate. Consider ``right handed’’ circularly polarized light: B � t) = E0 cos(kz − ωt)(cos(ωt)x̂ + sin(ωt)ŷ) y E(z, � t) = B0 cos(kz − ωt)(cos(ωt)ŷ − sin(ωt)x̂) B(z, As the light heads towards us, we see the fields rotating CCW. There is also ``left handed’’ circularly polarized light. B y � E(z, t) = E0 cos(kz − ωt)(cos(ωt)x̂ − sin(ωt)ŷ) � t) = B0 cos(kz − ωt)(cos(ωt)ŷ + sin(ωt)x̂) B(z, As the light heads towards us, we see the fields rotating CW. You can also see that if you add the RH to the LH light, the ``sin’’ terms have opposite signs and cancel, we we get linearly polarized light with E in the x direction, B in the y direction. Any direction of linearly polarized light can be represented as a sum of RH + LH circularly polarized light, and vice versa. Monday, February 18, 2013 E x E x Circular Polarization The picture from the text... Monday, February 18, 2013 Elliptical Polarization If the two linearly-polarized waves we add have different amplitudes, the sum is an elliptically polarized wave. The amplitude will, for example, be bigger when it is in the ±x direction than in the ±y direction. Monday, February 18, 2013 Pick a Direction? With a rope, you can make a wave traveling to the right with the displacement in the vertical or in the horizontal direction. You can also ``polarize’’ the wave build a filter that only allows waves with displacement in a particular direction to pass. By waving the end of rope around in a circle we generate a ``corkscrew’’ (or circularly polarized) wave, which is linearly polarized by a vertical slit. Monday, February 18, 2013 Polarization of Light Sources As we discussed earlier, if, as with the broadcast antenna shown to the left, you make the electrons oscillate vertically, then you get light with a vertically polarized E field. But if, as in the bulb, there is no preferred direction, the light is unpolarized - the E field of the light at any point varies randomly with time. PhET simulation Monday, February 18, 2013 Polarizing Light iClicker 1 of 3 We can polarize light, similar to how we polarize the transverse wave on a rope. We use materials that have slots smaller than the wavelength of light. Consider a metal slab with slots in it. Can we polarize microwaves, which have a few cm wavelength, with it? a) No. b) Yes. E is parallel to the slot. c) Yes. E ⊥ slot. d) Yes. But E is not oriented any particular way. e) Yes, but you really need small holes rather than slots. Microwave Demo Monday, February 18, 2013 Polarizing Visible Light Although the wavelength of visible light is < 1 μm, we can linearly polarize it using arrays of molecules, as in a polaroid filter. We can think of this similarly to microwaves and the metal plate: if the electric field orientation can accelerate electrons in the material - E is parallel to the long molecules - the electrons will accelerate, absorbing the energy from the field and screening out the field components in that direction. If the electrons cannot be accelerated, no energy is absorbed and the wave passes through. Monday, February 18, 2013 Single Polarizer Algebra: light has components relative to polarizer direction of: E|| = (E.n)n cos(kz-ωt) = Ecos(φ)cos(kz-ωt)n|| which passes through E⊥ = [E-(E.n)n] cos(kz-ωt) = Esin(φ)cos(kz-ωt)n⊥ which is blocked Note: The notation n|| and n⊥ to indicates the unit vectors parallel and perpendicular to the polarizing axis. Monday, February 18, 2013 What intensity of light makes it though a polarizer? Since I ∝ E , and E 2 || / Eincident = cos(φ), the intensity after the polarizer is Iout = Iincident cos2(φ). If the incident light is unpolarized, the average cos2(φ) is 1/2, so Iout = Iincident/2. One Polarizer Demo Monday, February 18, 2013 Polarizer + Analyzer -or- Polarizers Crossed at Arbitrary Angles ``Malus’s Law’’ Monday, February 18, 2013 Crossed Polarizers Two Polarizer Demo Monday, February 18, 2013 iClicker 2 of 3 I have 3 polarizers in a row, with the 1st in the x direction, the 2nd rotated 45o, and the 3rd in the y direction. What fraction of the light that makes it through the 1st polarizer also makes it through the 3rd polarizer? a) 0 = cos(φ1-φ3) = cos(90). b) 1/4 = cos2(45) x cos2(45). c) 1/2 = cos(45) x cos(45). d) It depends on whether the light is in the +x or -x direction initially. e) It depends on whether the light is linearly polarized or circularly polarized. Monday, February 18, 2013 Polarization in Reflection When light is incident upon a surface, it generally partially refracts and partially reflects. The ``plane of incidence’’ is the plane that contains the incident and reflected light rays. The electric field can be split into a component in the plane of incidence, and a component perpendicular to the plane of incidence (also parallel to the surface). Normally each component is partially reflected and partially transmitted, but not to the same degree, so the reflected / transmitted light is partially polarized. Monday, February 18, 2013 Brewster’s angle Brewster’s angle is the angle for which θp + θb = 90o: the reflected and refracted rays are 90o apart. From Snell’s Law, na sin(θp) = nb sin(θb) na sin(θp) = nb sin(90-θp) na sin(θp) = nb cos(θp) tan(θp) = nb/na For this angle, the reflected ray is polarized completely perpendicular to the plane of incidence, and the component of the E field in the plane of incidence is completely refracted. Monday, February 18, 2013 Brewster’s angle For this angle, the reflected ray is polarized completely perpendicular to the plane of incidence, and the component of the E field in the plane of incidence is completely refracted. Practical application: reflected sunlight has large horizontal polarization, the glare of which can be largely eliminated with vertical polarizing sunglasses. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Brewster%27s_angle Monday, February 18, 2013 Brewster’s angle Practical application: Spying on your neighbors? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster's_angle Left: reflection of light from a window prevents you from seeing in. Right: a polarizer eliminates most of the reflections, so you can see light form inside the room Monday, February 18, 2013 Scattering of Light by Air Why are clouds white? Why is the sky blue? Thin clouds are white because they scatter all wavelengths of light. Thick clouds turn dark / gray because too much of the light is absorbed. The sky is blue because the scattering of light is proportional to f4 or 1/ λ4. Blue light scatters into your eye. Similarly, in the evening the sun appears more red because the blue light scatters out. Blue scatters more by a factor of ≈ (750/450)4 ≈ 8. The scattered blue light is polarized. You can see that the sunlight can accelerate atoms in the yz plane, but the sunbather sees acceleration in the xz plane. The sunbather sees linearly (z) polarized light. Monday, February 18, 2013 Calcite crystal from Furrfu, Wikimedia Commons Calcite is a material where the index of refraction depends on the polarization of the light (birefringence). Thus the light is refracted into two images, each polarized differently. We can see this with a polarizer. Monday, February 18, 2013 iClicker 3 of 3 Light is normally incident on two polarizers that are crossed at an angle of 60 degrees. (It might help to know that cos(60) = 1/2.) What fraction of incident unpolarized light intensity is transmitted through both polarizers? a) 1/2. b) 1/4. c) 1/8. d) 1/16. e) It depends on whether the incident light is unpolarized linearly or unpolarized circularly. Monday, February 18, 2013