Polarization
Polarization
Polarization
What kind of waves can be polarized?
• All transverse waves such as
– Wave in string
– Light
• Plane polarized: wave is
always in a single fixed plane
• This string wave is vertically
polarized; it can pass
through a vertical “filter” but
not a horizontal one
Light waves are transverse waves
• Light consists of perpendicular oscillating
electric and magnetic fields
• We can concentrate on the electric field in this
discussion since it is the one our eyes perceive
Polarizing Light by Absorption
• Unpolarized light has electric fields in all
directions
• Passing unpolarized light through a filter
reduces its intensity by 50%
Polarization by Transmission
• What happens when polarized light is passed
through additional filters?
• According to Malus’s Law:
I = I0cos2 θ
where I = transmitted intensity
I0 = incident intensity
θ = angle between e-field and filter’s
transmission axis
Malus’ Law Applet
http://www.lon-capa.org/~mmp/kap24/polarizers/Polarizer.htm
Polarizers and Analyzers
• Polarizer: a polarizing filter used to produce
polarized light
• Analyzer: a polarizing filter used to determine if
light is polarized
• Unpolarized light’s intensity is reduced by 50%
when passing through a polarizer/analyzer
regardless of the orientation of the
polarizer/analyzer
• Already polarized light’s intensity is reduced
depending on orientation of polarizer/analyzer
according to Malus’s Law
Polarization by Reflection
When unpolarized light reflects off a non-
metallic surface, the reflected ray is
partially polarized