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Basic electromagnetics and interference Optics, Eugene Hecht, Chpt 3 Maxwell’s equations • Based on observation -- not derived Induction B CE dl A t dS Loop voltage Charges give electric field No magnetic monopoles Flux change 1 E dS 0 A Electric field flux dV V Charge B dS 0 A No net magnetic flux through closed surface Currents give E magnetic field CB dl J t dS A B a I Current Changing electric field Capacitor Q = CV Q = A E = V ( A /d) C = A /d I = dQ/dt = A dE/dt Electromagnetic field in vacuum • No sources of electric field, no currents B CE dl A t dS AE dS 0 AB dS 0 E CB dl 0 0 A t dS Light speed: c = 1/() = w/k B=E/c Maxwell’s eqns -- differential form E / 0 1 B E c t B 0 E B J t 2 E 2 E 0 0 2 t 2 B 2 B 0 0 2 t Propagating waves E = E0 cos(kx - wt) B = B0 cos(kx - wt) Energy and momentum • • • • Electric field UE = 0 E2/2 Magnetic field UB = B2/ (2 0) Since c = 1/() -- UB = UE Poynting vector: S c 2 E B cos 2 (k r wt ) 0 0 0 • Average energy flow = c 0 E02 /2 • Momentum dp/dt = F = dU/dx -- p = (k/w) U = U/c Photons • Energy is quantized: U = w • Momentum also quantized: p = k Light is wave • Electric field oscillates with position – travelling wave – wavelength l = c / n ~ 1/2 micron in visible – electric fields can add or subtract (interference) • Combine two laser beams – Incoherent -- equal input intensity -- equal output intensities – Coherent -- light can go one way, but not other -- intensity = sum of inputs Light wave E field position Interference Partial mirror 180° phase shift on reflection Constructive interference • light Destructive interference • no light Interferometer • • • • Split laser beams -- then recombine Output light direction depends on path length difference Path change ~ l/2 << 1 micron Very sensitive – accurate position measurement – noisy Interferometer Mirror Beamsplitter Beamsplitter Mirror Interferometers Mach-Zender -- Modulators for fiber communications Mirror Beamsplitter Beamsplitter Outputs Inputs Michaelson -- FTIR spectrometers Input Beamsplitter Mirror Mirror Outputs Mirror Sanac -- Laser gyros for aircraft navigation Input Mirror Mirror Beamsplitter Outputs Mirror Fabry-Perot -- Lasers and wavelength (ring version shown) Input Beamsplitter Mirror Beamsplitter Output Output Mirror Mach-Zender • Simplest -- all inputs and outputs separate – can cascade – ex: quantum computing • Used for high speed light modulation – fiber communications Mach-Zender Interferometer Mirror Beamsplitter Beamsplitter Outputs Inputs Mirror Michaelson • Like folded Mach-Zender – beamsplitter serves an input and output – first used to attempt detection of ether – popular in optics courses • Advantages: Mirror Input Beamsplitter Outputs Mirror = – easy to change path length difference – coherence length measurement – FFT spectrometer • Dis-advantages Translation stage option – some output light goes back to source – optical feedback – problem for laser diodes Mirror Beamsplitter Optical feedback Input Outputs Mirror Sanac • Replace 2nd beamsplitter with mirror – used in rotation sensors -- laser gyro (ex: airplanes) • Path lengths always equal – counter-propagating, low noise • Only non-reciprocal phase shifts important – magnetic field Zeeman – general relativity -- rotation – Fizeau drag Sanac Mirror Input Mirror Beamsplitter Outputs Mirror Etalon and ring cavity • Multi-pass devices • Ring – – – – Mach-Zender with beamsplitters rotated 90° Interference after round trip need long coherence length used in laser cavities • Etalon – – – – – Etalon Beamsplitter interference after round trip optical standing wave used in laser cavities, filters Advantage -- simple Disadvantage -- optical feedback Beamsplitter Input Output Output Ring Mirror Input Beamsplitter Beamsplitter Output Output Mirror Real interferometers General case • Alignment not exact -- fringes • Curvatures not exact -- rings Straight fringes constructive destructive constructive Rings -- “bulls eye” constructive destructive Coherence length • Light beam composed of more than one wavelength • Example: two wavelengths • Path length difference = 1/2 beat wavelength – one wavelength deflects downward – other wavelength deflects upward – net result -- no interference fringes visible Dual wavelength laser beam Interference of two-wavelength beams Beat length Wavelength #1 Wavelength #2 General case • • • • Many wavelengths Interference only over limited path difference Define as “coherence length” Fringe strength vs. path difference – related to spectral content of light – Fourier transform spectrometer Multi wavelength light wave E field position Linear polarization • E-field magnitude oscillates • Direction fixed • Arbitrary polarization angle – superposition of x and y polarized waves – real numbers Example 45 ° linear polarization Time evolution Circular polarization • E-field magnitude constant • Direction rotates • Complex superposition of x and y polarizations – x and y in quadrature Time evolution Example: right circular polarization Waveplates • Polarization converters • One linear polarization direction propagates faster • Half wave plate -- phase delay 180° Rotate linear pol. by angle 2q – rotate linear polarization up to 90° – fast axis at 45° to input polarization direction • Quarter wave plate -- phase delay 90° – convert linear to circular polarization – R or L for fast axis +45 or -45 to input pol. Create circular polarization Retardation of one polarization Isolators -- 1 • Polarizer and quarter waveplate • Double pass through quarter wave plate – same as half wave plate – rotate polarization by up to 90° • Polarizer blocks reflected light Polarizer Quarter wave Reflecting element