Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Waves, Light & Quanta Tim Freegarde Web Gallery of Art; National Gallery, London Categories of optical polarization • linear (plane) polarization • non-equal components in phase • circular polarization • equal components 90° out of phase • elliptical polarization • all other cases 2 Polarizing components LINEAR CIRCULAR POLARIZER (filter/separator) Tx Ty TL TR WAVEPLATE (retarder) x y L R 3 Polarization notation • circular polarization • right- or left-handed rotation when looking towards source • traces out opposite (right- or left-) handed thread RCP plane of incidence perpendicular parallel • linear (plane) polarization • parallel or perpendicular to plane of incidence • plane of incidence contains wavevector and normal to surface 4 Characterizing the optical polarization • wavevector insufficient to define electromagnetic wave • we must additionally define the polarization vector a ax , a y • e.g. linear polarization at angle i a cos, esin sin k x z y 5 Jones vector calculus • if the polarization state may be represented by a Jones vector a ax, a y • then the action of an optical element may be described by a matrix ax a11 a12 ax a a a a y 21 22 y JONES MATRIX a11 a12 A a a 21 22 6 Jones vector calculus state may be represented transmission by • if thepolarization Aby 1 a horizontal polarizer Jones vector 1 0 0 0 ai a x, a0y exp retardation by x A the action of an optical element • 2then waveplate 0 exp i y may be described by a matrix 11 a12 cosA asin projection onto a A3 rotated axes 21 a22 sin cos ax a11 a12 ax a a a a y 21 22 y JONES MATRIX 7 Birefringence • asymmetry in crystal structure causes two different refractive indices • opposite polarizations follow different paths through crystal • birefringence, double refraction 8 Linear polarizers (analyzers) • birefringence results in different angles of refraction and total internal reflection • many different designs, offering different geometries and acceptance angles o-ray e-ray 38.5º e-ray o-ray s-ray • a similar function results from multiple reflection p-ray 9 Waveplates (retarders) • at normal incidence, a birefringent material retards one polarization relative to the other • linearly polarized light becomes elliptically polarized 2 0 e l WAVEPLATE 10 Compensators • a variable waveplate uses two wedges to provide a variable thickness of birefringent crystal adjust • a further crystal, oriented with the fast and slow axes interchanged, allows the retardation to be adjusted around zero variable • with a single, fixed first section, this is a ‘single order’ (or ‘zero order’) waveplate for small constant retardation SOLEIL COMPENSATOR fixed 11 Unpolarized light • for any system • intensity Ex a b Ex E c d E y y E x2 E y2 aEx bE y 2 cEx dE y 2 a 2 c 2 Ex2 b 2 d 2 E y2 2ab cd Ex E y • if no correlation between E x and E y , a 2 c 2 Ex2 b 2 d 2 E y2 • if Ex2 Ex2 12 E02, Tx Ty 2 12 Electromagnetic waves • light is a transverse wave: E perpendicular to k x Ex z By Ex • Faraday • Ampère y B . d S t E B.ds 0 J 0 t .dS E B.ds 0 0 t .dS E.ds x y z By 13 Dielectrics • atomic electrons move in response to electric field • resulting atomic dipole radiates field which adds to original • Faraday • Ampère z B.dS t EE B . d s J .dS 0 0 r .dS t t E.ds 14 Waves, Light & Quanta Tim Freegarde Web Gallery of Art; National Gallery, London Diffraction • irridescence of feathers (Grimaldi, 1665) S Yoshioka & S Kinoshita, Forma 17 169 (2002) 16 Diffraction x d 17 Diffraction 18 Diffraction 19 Huygens’ wave construction • propagation from a point source Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) 20 Huygens’ wave construction • reflection at a plane surface Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) 21 Huygens’ wave construction • refraction at a plane surface Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) 22 Huygens’ wave construction • mirages by refraction in the atmosphere Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) 23 Huygens’ wave construction • Fresnel integral • phasors shorter / rotate more quickly at distance to give spiral 24 Arago’s bright spot • M A Fresnel, La diffraction de la lumière (1818) • S D Poisson: Let parallel light impinge on an opaque disk, the surrounding being perfectly transparent. The disk casts a shadow - of course - but the very centre of the shadow will be bright. Succinctly, there is no darkness anywhere along the central perpendicular behind an opaque disk (except immediately behind the disk). • F Arago: One of your commissioners, M Poisson, had deduced from the integrals reported by [Fresnel] the singular result that the centre of the shadow of an opaque circular screen must, when the rays penetrate there at incidences which are only a little more oblique, be just as illuminated as if the screen did not exist. The consequence has been submitted to the test of direct experiment, and observation has perfectly confirmed the calculation. 25