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Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday
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Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday

Page 2: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Horizontally Polarized LightHorizontally Polarized Light

Credit: the next few slides are from Dr. Durfee

Page 3: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Vertically Polarized LightVertically Polarized Light

Page 4: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Diagonally Polarized LightDiagonally Polarized Light

Page 5: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Circularly Polarized LightCircularly Polarized Light

Page 6: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Elliptically Polarized LightElliptically Polarized Light

Page 7: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Unpolarized LightUnpolarized Light

Page 8: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question What type of polarization is displayed in

the animation? http://stokes.byu.edu/emwave_flash.html

a. Horizontally polarizedb. Vertically polarizedc. Other polarizedd. Non-polarized

Page 9: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Circularly Polarized, pictures

Pictures from Wikipedia

Page 10: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Polarizers Lines of wires Polaroid Film Crystals

Polaroid film Crystals

www.thorlabs.com

Page 11: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question If you send horizontal linearly polarized

light through a (perfect) vertical polarizer, how much of the light intensity will get through?

a. 0-20%b. 20-40%c. 40-60%d. 60-80%e. 80-100%

Page 12: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question If you send horizontal linearly polarized

light at 45 through a perfect vertical polarizer, how much of the light intensity will get through?

a. 0-20%b. 20-40%c. 40-60%d. 60-80%e. 80-100%

Page 13: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question If you send circularly polarized light

through a perfect vertical polarizer, how much of the light intensity will get through?

a. 0-20%b. 20-40%c. 40-60%d. 60-80%e. 80-100%

Page 14: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question (Like HW 27-2) If you send horizontal linearly

polarized light through a vertical polarizer, no light gets through because there is no component of the electric field in the light wave that is oscillating vertically. If you insert a diagonal polarizer at 45 between the two, how much of the light intensity will now get through the final polarizer?

a. 0-20%b. 20-40%c. 40-60%d. 60-80%e. 80-100%

Page 15: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Demos Polarization configurations

Page 16: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Reading Quiz What do we call the angle at which light,

reflected off of a (non-conducting) surface, is completely polarized?

a. Brewster’s Angleb. Euler’s Anglec. Maxwell’s Angled. Snell’s Anglee. Sorenson’s Angle

Page 17: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Remember these? (Fresnel Coefficients)

2 1 1 2

1 2 1 2

v v n nrv v n n

2 1

1 2 1 2

2 2v ntv v n n

If near perpendicular (1-D problem)

2R r 2

1T r

For arbitrary angle (you don’t need to know for this class)

1 1 2 2.

1 1 2 2

cos cos

cos coss polarn n

rn n

1 2 2 1.

1 2 2 1

cos cos

cos cosp polarn n

rn n

1 1.

1 1 2 2

2 cos

cos coss polarn

tn n

1 1.

1 2 2 1

2 cos

cos cosp polarn

tn n

What is s-polar? What is p-polar?

Page 18: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Plots for air (n=1) to glass (n=1.5)s-polarization p-polarization

field amplitudes vs

intensities vs

20 40 60 80

1.0

0.5

0.5

r

t

20 40 60 80

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

R

T

20 40 60 80 0.2

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

r

t

20 40 60 80

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

R

T

field amplitudes vs

intensities vs Brewster’s angle!Do you always get a

180 phase shift upon reflection?

Page 19: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Fresnel Coefficients, cont.

2 1 1 2

1 2 1 2

v v n nrv v n n

2 1

1 2 1 2

2 2v ntv v n n

If near perpendicular (1-D problem)

2R r 2

1T r

For arbitrary angle (you don’t need to know for this class)

1 1 2 2.

1 1 2 2

cos cos

cos coss polarn n

rn n

1 2 2 1.

1 2 2 1

cos cos

cos cosp polarn n

rn n

1 1.

1 1 2 2

2 cos

cos coss polarn

tn n

1 1.

1 2 2 1

2 cos

cos cosp polarn

tn n

Set numerator = 0, apply Snell’s Law… lots of algebra/trig…

tan1 = n2/n1

Page 20: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Thought question

If you send an unpolarized beam at a piece of glass at Brewster’s angle, what happens?

a. The reflected beam is partially polarizedb. The reflected beam is completely polarizedc. The transmitted beam is partially polarizedd. The transmitted beam is completely

polarizede. More than one of the above

Applications:Sunglasses

Laser “Brewster windows”

Page 21: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Brewster’s angle

Why does the light “care” about 90?

Image from Wikipedia

Page 22: Announcements 11/1/10 Prayer Test going on… Lab 7 due on Friday.

Reflection: microscopic details How does the wire-line polarizer work? Reflection off of a surface

a. Why are metals better reflectors than insulators are?

b. What is the emitted light from an oscillating electron?

Brewster’s angle: reflected ray at 90 to transmitted ray

a. What happens to p-polarization at this angle?