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What is polarized light?

Looking "head-on " we only see the blue arrows up & down. y. y. z. z. x. x. What is polarized light?. Light is polarized if the light wave and electric force field arrows remains in the same plane The (blue) arrows must be perpendicular to the ray

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What is polarized light?

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  1. Looking "head-on" we only see the blue arrows up & down y y z z x x What is polarized light? • Light is polarized if the light wave and electric force field arrows remains in the same plane • The (blue)arrowsmust be perpendicular to the ray • This is a light ray traveling in the z-direction and polarized in the y-direction • Here is a light ray traveling in the same direction but polarized in the x-direction • We see the polarization in the x-y plane, looking at rays head-on • The blue arrows point up and down or left and right, stacked up behind one-another.

  2. y wave travels in z-direction z x y x What is unpolarized light? • For unpolarized light the plane of polarization keeps jumping around • But the electric field arrows remain perpendicular to the ray (direction of travel of the wave) • We visualize this in the x-y plane (looking into the ray) as shown at right • The many crossed double sided arrows are the symbol for unpolarized light • See Physics 2000 electric force arrows jump around while remaining perpen-dicular to the ray http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/index.pl

  3. Polarization • Polarization is a phenomenon of light that is used in sun-glasses, photography and 3-D movies. • Play with the two polarizing filters for a few minutes and note what is happening and see if you can think of any reasons for it.

  4. Polarization Hint • Light vibrates in all directions. • A polarizing filter acts like a picket fence. It only lets certain direction vibrations pass through it. • Therefore, if you pass light through two of them you can completely block the light from passing through. • HOW?

  5. For light: Polarizers (Polaroid films) Same story:

  6. Polarization

  7. Polaroid sunglasses (and camera filters) take advantage of this effect to block bright reflected light from the snow, beach, road, water, sky, etc. • When you wear polaroid sunglasses they block light polarized in the plane of your two eyes • When your head is vertical this is the horizontal plane • Since reflected light from the ground or scattered light from the sun are mostly polarized in the horizontal plane such light is mostly blocked • Demo with polaroid filters • The first filter blocks one polarization and lets through the other (perpendicular) one • The second blocks more and more of the remaining polarized light as its axis is rotated so as to permit only the polarization blocked by the first • When the axes of the two polaroid filters are at right angles to each other no light comes through

  8. Polarization Photography Reduce Sun Glare Reduce Reflections Darkens Sky Increase Color Saturation Reduce Haze

  9. Polarization Photography With Polarizer Without Polarizer • Provides better Color Saturation • Darkens the sky

  10. Polarization Photography With Polarizer Without Polarizer

  11. Polarization Photography : Scattering Haze De-hazed

  12. Polarization Photography : Wide Angle Lenses Vignetting of the Sky

  13. Polarization Photography : Reflections ReduceReflections

  14. Polarization Photography : Reflections ReduceReflections

  15. Aqua-polaricam Y. Schechner & N. Karpel, underwater imaging

  16. Polarization Photography : Underwater • Underwater pipelines • and communication • Offshore structures • Offshore drilling rigs • Vessel inspection • Underwater ROV/AOV • Marine biology • Recreational photography • Marine archaeology • Underwater mapping

  17. o 180 Light as Plane Waves • Polarized Wave: Has only one preferred orientation. • Un-polarized Wave: Has no preferred orientation. • or has all orientations. • Partially polarized wave: Has preferred orientation but • has energy in other orientations as well.

  18. Crossed Polarizers

  19. Polarizer Puzzle If crossed polarizers block all light, why does putting a third polarizer at 45° between them result in some transmission of light?

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