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Birefringence

Birefringence is the optical property of a material having a refractive index that depends on the polarization and propagation direction of light.[1] These optically anisotropic materials are said to be birefringent (or birefractive). The birefringence is often quantified as the maximum difference between refractive indices exhibited by the material. Crystals with non-cubic crystal structures are often birefringent, as are plastics under mechanical stress.

A calcite crystal laid upon a graph paper with blue lines showing the double refraction
In this example, optic axis along the surface is shown perpendicular to plane of incidence. Incoming light in the s polarization (which means perpendicular to plane of incidence - and so in this example becomes "parallel polarisation" to optic axis, thus is called extraordinary ray) sees a greater refractive index than light in the p polarization (which becomes ordinary ray because "perpendicular polarisation" to optic axis) and so s polarization ray is undergoing greater refraction on entering and exiting the crystal.

Birefringence is responsible for the phenomenon of double refraction whereby a ray of light, when incident upon a birefringent material, is split by polarization into two rays taking slightly different paths. This effect was first described by Danish scientist Rasmus Bartholin in 1669, who observed it[2] in calcite, a crystal having one of the strongest birefringences. In the 19th century Augustin-Jean Fresnel described the phenomenon in terms of polarization, understanding light as a wave with field components in transverse polarization (perpendicular to the direction of the wave vector).[3][4] Parametric down-conversion is a phenomenon similar to birefringence arising in nonlinear crystals in the presence of an electromagnetic field.

Explanation

 
Doubly refracted image as seen through a calcite crystal, seen through a rotating polarizing filter illustrating the opposite polarization states of the two images.

A mathematical description of wave propagation in a birefringent medium is presented below. Following is a qualitative explanation of the phenomenon.

Uniaxial materials

The simplest type of birefringence is described as uniaxial, meaning that there is a single direction governing the optical anisotropy whereas all directions perpendicular to it (or at a given angle to it) are optically equivalent. Thus rotating the material around this axis does not change its optical behaviour. This special direction is known as the optic axis of the material. Light propagating parallel to the optic axis (whose polarization is always perpendicular to the optic axis) is governed by a refractive index no (for "ordinary") regardless of its specific polarization. For rays with any other propagation direction, there is one linear polarization that would be perpendicular to the optic axis, and a ray with that polarization is called an ordinary ray and is governed by the same refractive index value no. For a ray propagating in the same direction but with a polarization perpendicular to that of the ordinary ray, the polarization direction will be partly in the direction of the optic axis, and this extraordinary ray will be governed by a different, direction-dependent refractive index. Because the index of refraction depends on the polarization when unpolarized light enters a uniaxial birefringent material, it is split into two beams travelling in different directions, one having the polarization of the ordinary ray and the other the polarization of the extraordinary ray. The ordinary ray will always experience a refractive index of no, whereas the refractive index of the extraordinary ray will be in between no and ne, depending on the ray direction as described by the index ellipsoid. The magnitude of the difference is quantified by the birefringence:[verification needed]

 

The propagation (as well as reflection coefficient) of the ordinary ray is simply described by no as if there were no birefringence involved. The extraordinary ray, as its name suggests, propagates unlike any wave in an isotropic optical material. Its refraction (and reflection) at a surface can be understood using the effective refractive index (a value in between no and ne). Its power flow (given by the Poynting vector) is not exactly in the direction of the wave vector. This causes an additional shift in that beam, even when launched at normal incidence, as is popularly observed using a crystal of calcite as photographed above. Rotating the calcite crystal will cause one of the two images, that of the extraordinary ray, to rotate slightly around that of the ordinary ray, which remains fixed.[verification needed]

When the light propagates either along or orthogonal to the optic axis, such a lateral shift does not occur. In the first case, both polarizations are perpendicular to the optic axis and see the same effective refractive index, so there is no extraordinary ray. In the second case the extraordinary ray propagates at a different phase velocity (corresponding to ne) but still has the power flow in the direction of the wave vector. A crystal with its optic axis in this orientation, parallel to the optical surface, may be used to create a waveplate, in which there is no distortion of the image but an intentional modification of the state of polarization of the incident wave. For instance, a quarter-wave plate is commonly used to create circular polarization from a linearly polarized source.

Biaxial materials

The case of so-called biaxial crystals is substantially more complex.[5] These are characterized by three refractive indices corresponding to three principal axes of the crystal. For most ray directions, both polarizations would be classified as extraordinary rays but with different effective refractive indices. Being extraordinary waves, the direction of power flow is not identical to the direction of the wave vector in either case.

The two refractive indices can be determined using the index ellipsoids for given directions of the polarization. Note that for biaxial crystals the index ellipsoid will not be an ellipsoid of revolution ("spheroid") but is described by three unequal principle refractive indices nα, nβ and nγ. Thus there is no axis around which a rotation leaves the optical properties invariant (as there is with uniaxial crystals whose index ellipsoid is a spheroid).

Although there is no axis of symmetry, there are two optical axes or binormals which are defined as directions along which light may propagate without birefringence, i.e., directions along which the wavelength is independent of polarization.[5] For this reason, birefringent materials with three distinct refractive indices are called biaxial. Additionally, there are two distinct axes known as optical ray axes or biradials along which the group velocity of the light is independent of polarization.

Double refraction

When an arbitrary beam of light strikes the surface of a birefringent material at non-normal incidence, the polarization component normal to the optic axis (ordinary ray) and the other linear polarization (extraordinary ray) will be refracted toward somewhat different paths. Natural light, so-called unpolarized light, consists of equal amounts of energy in any two orthogonal polarizations. Even linearly polarized light has some energy in both polarizations, unless aligned along one of the two axes of birefringence. According to Snell's law of refraction, the two angles of refraction are governed by the effective refractive index of each of these two polarizations. This is clearly seen, for instance, in the Wollaston prism which separates incoming light into two linear polarizations using prisms composed of a birefringent material such as calcite.

The different angles of refraction for the two polarization components are shown in the figure at the top of this page, with the optic axis along the surface (and perpendicular to the plane of incidence), so that the angle of refraction is different for the p polarization (the "ordinary ray" in this case, having its electric vector perpendicular to the optic axis) and the s polarization (the "extraordinary ray" in this case, whose electric field polarization includes a component in the direction of the optic axis). In addition, a distinct form of double refraction occurs, even with normal incidence, in cases where the optic axis is not along the refracting surface (nor exactly normal to it); in this case, the dielectric polarization of the birefringent material is not exactly in the direction of the wave's electric field for the extraordinary ray. The direction of power flow (given by the Poynting vector) for this inhomogenous wave is at a finite angle from the direction of the wave vector resulting in an additional separation between these beams. So even in the case of normal incidence, where one would compute the angle of refraction as zero (according to Snell's law, regardless of the effective index of refraction), the energy of the extraordinary ray is propagated at an angle. If exiting the crystal through a face parallel to the incoming face, the direction of both rays will be restored, but leaving a shift between the two beams. This is commonly observed using a piece of calcite cut along its natural cleavage, placed above a paper with writing, as in the above photographs. On the contrary, waveplates specifically have their optic axis along the surface of the plate, so that with (approximately) normal incidence there will be no shift in the image from light of either polarization, simply a relative phase shift between the two light waves.

Terminology

 
Comparison of positive and negative birefringence : In positive birefringence (figure 1), the ordinary ray (p-polarisation in this case w.r.t. magenta-coloured plane of incidence), perpendicular to optic axis A is the fast ray (F) while the extraordinary ray (s-polarisation in this case and parallel to optic axis A) is the slow ray (S). In negative birefringence (figure 2), it is the reverse.

Much of the work involving polarization preceded the understanding of light as a transverse electromagnetic wave, and this has affected some terminology in use. Isotropic materials have symmetry in all directions and the refractive index is the same for any polarization direction. An anisotropic material is called "birefringent" because it will generally refract a single incoming ray in two directions, which we now understand correspond to the two different polarizations. This is true of either a uniaxial or biaxial material.

In a uniaxial material, one ray behaves according to the normal law of refraction (corresponding to the ordinary refractive index), so an incoming ray at normal incidence remains normal to the refracting surface. As explained above, the other polarization can deviate from normal incidence, which cannot be described using the law of refraction. This thus became known as the extraordinary ray. The terms "ordinary" and "extraordinary" are still applied to the polarization components perpendicular to and not perpendicular to the optic axis respectively, even in cases where no double refraction is involved.

A material is termed uniaxial when it has a single direction of symmetry in its optical behavior, which we term the optic axis. It also happens to be the axis of symmetry of the index ellipsoid (a spheroid in this case). The index ellipsoid could still be described according to the refractive indices, nα, nβ and nγ, along three coordinate axes; in this case two are equal. So if nα = nβ corresponding to the x and y axes, then the extraordinary index is nγ corresponding to the z axis, which is also called the optic axis in this case.

Materials in which all three refractive indices are different are termed biaxial and the origin of this term is more complicated and frequently misunderstood. In a uniaxial crystal, different polarization components of a beam will travel at different phase velocities, except for rays in the direction of what we call the optic axis. Thus the optic axis has the particular property that rays in that direction do not exhibit birefringence, with all polarizations in such a beam experiencing the same index of refraction. It is very different when the three principal refractive indices are all different; then an incoming ray in any of those principal directions will still encounter two different refractive indices. But it turns out that there are two special directions (at an angle to all of the 3 axes) where the refractive indices for different polarizations are again equal. For this reason, these crystals were designated as biaxial, with the two "axes" in this case referring to ray directions in which propagation does not experience birefringence.

Fast and slow rays

In a birefringent material, a wave consists of two polarization components which generally are governed by different effective refractive indices. The so-called slow ray is the component for which the material has the higher effective refractive index (slower phase velocity), while the fast ray is the one with a lower effective refractive index. When a beam is incident on such a material from air (or any material with a lower refractive index), the slow ray is thus refracted more towards the normal than the fast ray. In the example figure at top of this page, it can be seen that refracted ray with s polarization (with its electric vibration along the direction of the optic axis, thus called the extraordinary ray[6]) is the slow ray in given scenario.

Using a thin slab of that material at normal incidence, one would implement a waveplate. In this case, there is essentially no spatial separation between the polarizations, the phase of the wave in the parallel polarization (the slow ray) will be retarded with respect to the perpendicular polarization. These directions are thus known as the slow axis and fast axis of the waveplate.

Positive or negative

Uniaxial birefringence is classified as positive when the extraordinary index of refraction ne is greater than the ordinary index no. Negative birefringence means that Δn = neno is less than zero.[7] In other words, the polarization of the fast (or slow) wave is perpendicular to the optic axis when the birefringence of the crystal is positive (or negative, respectively). In the case of biaxial crystals, all three of the principal axes have different refractive indices, so this designation does not apply. But for any defined ray direction one can just as well designate the fast and slow ray polarizations.

Sources of optical birefringence

 
View from under the Sky Pool, London with coloured fringes due to stress birefringence of partially polarised skylight through a circular polariser

While the best known source of birefringence is the entrance of light into an anisotropic crystal, it can result in otherwise optically isotropic materials in a few ways:

Common birefringent materials

 
Sandwiched in between crossed polarizers, clear polystyrene cutlery exhibits wavelength-dependent birefringence

The best characterized birefringent materials are crystals. Due to their specific crystal structures their refractive indices are well defined. Depending on the symmetry of a crystal structure (as determined by one of the 32 possible crystallographic point groups), crystals in that group may be forced to be isotropic (not birefringent), to have uniaxial symmetry, or neither in which case it is a biaxial crystal. The crystal structures permitting uniaxial and biaxial birefringence are noted in the two tables, below, listing the two or three principal refractive indices (at wavelength 590 nm) of some better-known crystals.[8]

In addition to induced birefringence while under stress, many plastics obtain permanent birefringence during manufacture due to stresses which are "frozen in" due to mechanical forces present when the plastic is molded or extruded.[9] For example, ordinary cellophane is birefringent. Polarizers are routinely used to detect stress, either applied or frozen-in, in plastics such as polystyrene and polycarbonate.

Cotton fiber is birefringent because of high levels of cellulosic material in the fibre's secondary cell wall which is directionally aligned with the cotton fibers.

Polarized light microscopy is commonly used in biological tissue, as many biological materials are linearly or circularly birefringent. Collagen, found in cartilage, tendon, bone, corneas, and several other areas in the body, is birefringent and commonly studied with polarized light microscopy.[10] Some proteins are also birefringent, exhibiting form birefringence.[11]

Inevitable manufacturing imperfections in optical fiber leads to birefringence, which is one cause of pulse broadening in fiber-optic communications. Such imperfections can be geometrical (lack of circular symmetry), or due to unequal lateral stress applied to the optical fibre. Birefringence is intentionally introduced (for instance, by making the cross-section elliptical) in order to produce polarization-maintaining optical fibers. Birefringence can be induced (or corrected!) in optical fibers through bending them which causes anisotropy in form and stress given the axis around which it is bent and radius of curvature.

In addition to anisotropy in the electric polarizability that we have been discussing, anisotropy in the magnetic permeability could be a source of birefringence. At optical frequencies, there is no measurable magnetic polarizability (μ=μ0) of natural materials, so this is not an actual source of birefringence at optical wavelengths.

Measurement

Birefringence and other polarization-based optical effects (such as optical rotation and linear or circular dichroism) can be observed by measuring any change in the polarization of light passing through the material. These measurements are known as polarimetry. Polarized light microscopes, which contain two polarizers that are at 90° to each other on either side of the sample, are used to visualize birefringence, since light that has not been affected by birefringence remains in a polarization that is totally rejected by the second polarizer ("analyzer"). The addition of quarter-wave plates permits examination using circularly polarized light. Determination of the change in polarization state using such an apparatus is the basis of ellipsometry, by which the optical properties of specular surfaces can be gauged through reflection.

Birefringence measurements have been made with phase-modulated systems for examining the transient flow behaviour of fluids.[13][14] Birefringence of lipid bilayers can be measured using dual-polarization interferometry. This provides a measure of the degree of order within these fluid layers and how this order is disrupted when the layer interacts with other biomolecules.

For the 3D measurement of birefringence, a technique based on holographic tomography [1] can be used.

Applications

 
Reflective twisted-nematic liquid-crystal display. Light reflected by the surface (6) (or coming from a backlight) is horizontally polarized (5) and passes through the liquid-crystal modulator (3) sandwiched in between transparent layers (2, 4) containing electrodes. Horizontally polarized light is blocked by the vertically oriented polarizer (1), except where its polarization has been rotated by the liquid crystal (3), appearing bright to the viewer.

Birefringence is used in many optical devices. Liquid-crystal displays, the most common sort of flat-panel display, cause their pixels to become lighter or darker through rotation of the polarization (circular birefringence) of linearly polarized light as viewed through a sheet polarizer at the screen's surface. Similarly, light modulators modulate the intensity of light through electrically induced birefringence of polarized light followed by a polarizer. The Lyot filter is a specialized narrowband spectral filter employing the wavelength dependence of birefringence. Waveplates are thin birefringent sheets widely used in certain optical equipment for modifying the polarization state of light passing through it.

Birefringence also plays an important role in second-harmonic generation and other nonlinear optical components, as the crystals used for this purpose are almost always birefringent. By adjusting the angle of incidence, the effective refractive index of the extraordinary ray can be tuned in order to achieve phase matching, which is required for the efficient operation of these devices.

Medicine

Birefringence is utilized in medical diagnostics. One powerful accessory used with optical microscopes is a pair of crossed polarizing filters. Light from the source is polarized in the x direction after passing through the first polarizer, but above the specimen is a polarizer (a so-called analyzer) oriented in the y direction. Therefore, no light from the source will be accepted by the analyzer, and the field will appear dark. Areas of the sample possessing birefringence will generally couple some of the x-polarized light into the y polarization; these areas will then appear bright against the dark background. Modifications to this basic principle can differentiate between positive and negative birefringence.

 
 
Gout and pseudogout crystals viewed under a microscope with a red compensator, which slows red light in one orientation (labeled "polarized light axis").[15] Urate crystals (left image) in gout appear yellow when their long axis is parallel to the slow transmission axis of the red compensator and appear blue when perpendicular. The opposite colors are seen in calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease (pseudogout, right image): blue when parallel and yellow when perpendicular.

For instance, needle aspiration of fluid from a gouty joint will reveal negatively birefringent monosodium urate crystals. Calcium pyrophosphate crystals, in contrast, show weak positive birefringence.[16] Urate crystals appear yellow, and calcium pyrophosphate crystals appear blue when their long axes are aligned parallel to that of a red compensator filter,[17] or a crystal of known birefringence is added to the sample for comparison.

The birefringence of tissue inside a living human thigh was measured using polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography at 1310 nm and a single mode fiber in a needle. Skeletal muscle birefringence was Δn = 1.79 × 10−3± 0.18×10−3, adipose Δn = 0.07 × 10−3 ± 0.50 × 10−3, superficial aponeurosis Δn = 5.08 × 10−3 ± 0.73 × 10−3 and interstitial tissue Δn = 0.65 ×10−3 ±0.39 ×10−3.[18] These measurements may be important for the development of a less invasive method to diagnose Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Birefringence can be observed in amyloid plaques such as are found in the brains of Alzheimer's patients when stained with a dye such as Congo Red. Modified proteins such as immunoglobulin light chains abnormally accumulate between cells, forming fibrils. Multiple folds of these fibers line up and take on a beta-pleated sheet conformation. Congo red dye intercalates between the folds and, when observed under polarized light, causes birefringence.

In ophthalmology, binocular retinal birefringence screening of the Henle fibers (photoreceptor axons that go radially outward from the fovea) provides a reliable detection of strabismus and possibly also of anisometropic amblyopia.[19] In healthy subjects, the maximum retardation induced by the Henle fiber layer is approximately 22 degrees at 840 nm.[20] Furthermore, scanning laser polarimetry uses the birefringence of the optic nerve fibre layer to indirectly quantify its thickness, which is of use in the assessment and monitoring of glaucoma. Polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography measurements obtained from healthy human subjects have demonstrated a change in birefringence of the retinal nerve fiber layer as a function of location around the optic nerve head.[21] The same technology was recently applied in the living human retina to quantify the polarization properties of vessel walls near the optic nerve.[22]

Birefringence characteristics in sperm heads allow the selection of spermatozoa for intracytoplasmic sperm injection.[23] Likewise, zona imaging uses birefringence on oocytes to select the ones with highest chances of successful pregnancy.[24] Birefringence of particles biopsied from pulmonary nodules indicates silicosis.

Dermatologists use dermatoscopes to view skin lesions. Dermoscopes use polarized light, allowing the user to view crystalline structures corresponding to dermal collagen in the skin. These structures may appear as shiny white lines or rosette shapes and are only visible under polarized dermoscopy.

Stress-induced birefringence

 
Color pattern of a plastic box with "frozen in" mechanical stress placed between two crossed polarizers

Isotropic solids do not exhibit birefringence. When they are under mechanical stress, birefringence results. The stress can be applied externally or is "frozen in" after a birefringent plastic ware is cooled after it is manufactured using injection molding. When such a sample is placed between two crossed polarizers, colour patterns can be observed, because polarization of a light ray is rotated after passing through a birefringent material and the amount of rotation is dependent on wavelength. The experimental method called photoelasticity used for analyzing stress distribution in solids is based on the same principle. There has been recent research on using stress induced birefringence in a glass plate to generate an Optical vortex and full Poincare beams (optical beams that have every possible polarization state across a cross-section).[25]

Other cases of birefringence

 
Birefringent rutile observed in different polarizations using a rotating polarizer (or analyzer)

Birefringence is observed in anisotropic elastic materials. In these materials, the two polarizations split according to their effective refractive indices, which are also sensitive to stress.

The study of birefringence in shear waves traveling through the solid Earth (the Earth's liquid core does not support shear waves) is widely used in seismology.[citation needed]

Birefringence is widely used in mineralogy to identify rocks, minerals, and gemstones.[citation needed]

Theory

 
Surface of the allowed k vectors for a fixed frequency for a biaxial crystal (see eq. 7).

In an isotropic medium (including free space) the so-called electric displacement (D) is just proportional to the electric field (E) according to D = ɛE where the material's permittivity ε is just a scalar (and equal to n2ε0 where n is the index of refraction). In an anisotropic material exhibiting birefringence, the relationship between D and E must now be described using a tensor equation:

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where ε is now a 3 × 3 permittivity tensor. We assume linearity and no magnetic permeability in the medium: μ = μ0. The electric field of a plane wave of angular frequency ω can be written in the general form:

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

where r is the position vector, t is time, and E0 is a vector describing the electric field at r = 0, t = 0. Then we shall find the possible wave vectors k. By combining Maxwell's equations for ∇ × E and ∇ × H, we can eliminate H = 1/μ0B to obtain:

 

 

 

 

 

(3a)

With no free charges, Maxwell's equation for the divergence of D vanishes:

 

 

 

 

 

(3b)

We can apply the vector identity ∇ × (∇ × A) = ∇(∇ ⋅ A) − ∇2A to the left hand side of eq. 3a, and use the spatial dependence in which each differentiation in x (for instance) results in multiplication by ikx to find:

 

 

 

 

 

(3c)

The right hand side of eq. 3a can be expressed in terms of E through application of the permittivity tensor ε and noting that differentiation in time results in multiplication by , eq. 3a then becomes:

 

 

 

 

 

(4a)

Applying the differentiation rule to eq. 3b we find:

 

 

 

 

 

(4b)

Eq. 4b indicates that D is orthogonal to the direction of the wavevector k, even though that is no longer generally true for E as would be the case in an isotropic medium. Eq. 4b will not be needed for the further steps in the following derivation.

Finding the allowed values of k for a given ω is easiest done by using Cartesian coordinates with the x, y and z axes chosen in the directions of the symmetry axes of the crystal (or simply choosing z in the direction of the optic axis of a uniaxial crystal), resulting in a diagonal matrix for the permittivity tensor ε:

 

 

 

 

 

(4c)

where the diagonal values are squares of the refractive indices for polarizations along the three principal axes x, y and z. With ε in this form, and substituting in the speed of light c using c2 = 1/μ0ε0, the x component of the vector equation eq. 4a becomes

 

 

 

 

 

(5a)

where Ex, Ey, Ez are the components of E (at any given position in space and time) and kx, ky, kz are the components of k. Rearranging, we can write (and similarly for the y and z components of eq. 4a)

 

 

 

 

 

(5b)

 

 

 

 

 

(5c)

 

 

 

 

 

(5d)

This is a set of linear equations in Ex, Ey, Ez, so it can have a nontrivial solution (that is, one other than E = 0) as long as the following determinant is zero:

 

 

 

 

 

(6)

Evaluating the determinant of eq. 6, and rearranging the terms according to the powers of  , the constant terms cancel. After eliminating the common factor   from the remaining terms, we obtain

 

 

 

 

 

(7)

In the case of a uniaxial material, choosing the optic axis to be in the z direction so that nx = ny = no and nz = ne, this expression can be factored into

 

 

 

 

 

(8)

Setting either of the factors in eq. 8 to zero will define an ellipsoidal surface[note 1] in the space of wavevectors k that are allowed for a given ω. The first factor being zero defines a sphere; this is the solution for so-called ordinary rays, in which the effective refractive index is exactly no regardless of the direction of k. The second defines a spheroid symmetric about the z axis. This solution corresponds to the so-called extraordinary rays in which the effective refractive index is in between no and ne, depending on the direction of k. Therefore, for any arbitrary direction of propagation (other than in the direction of the optic axis), two distinct wavevectors k are allowed corresponding to the polarizations of the ordinary and extraordinary rays.

For a biaxial material a similar but more complicated condition on the two waves can be described;[26] the locus of allowed k vectors (the wavevector surface) is a 4th-degree two-sheeted surface, so that in a given direction there are generally two permitted k vectors (and their opposites).[27] By inspection one can see that eq. 6 is generally satisfied for two positive values of ω. Or, for a specified optical frequency ω and direction normal to the wavefronts k/|k|, it is satisfied for two wavenumbers (or propagation constants) |k| (and thus effective refractive indices) corresponding to the propagation of two linear polarizations in that direction.

When those two propagation constants are equal then the effective refractive index is independent of polarization, and there is consequently no birefringence encountered by a wave traveling in that particular direction. For a uniaxial crystal, this is the optic axis, the ±z direction according to the above construction. But when all three refractive indices (or permittivities), nx, ny and nz are distinct, it can be shown that there are exactly two such directions, where the two sheets of the wave-vector surface touch;[27] these directions are not at all obvious and do not lie along any of the three principal axes (x, y, z according to the above convention). Historically that accounts for the use of the term "biaxial" for such crystals, as the existence of exactly two such special directions (considered "axes") was discovered well before polarization and birefringence were understood physically. These two special directions are generally not of particular interest; biaxial crystals are rather specified by their three refractive indices corresponding to the three axes of symmetry.

A general state of polarization launched into the medium can always be decomposed into two waves, one in each of those two polarizations, which will then propagate with different wavenumbers |k|. Applying the different phase of propagation to those two waves over a specified propagation distance will result in a generally different net polarization state at that point; this is the principle of the waveplate for instance. With a waveplate, there is no spatial displacement between the two rays as their k vectors are still in the same direction. That is true when each of the two polarizations is either normal to the optic axis (the ordinary ray) or parallel to it (the extraordinary ray).

In the more general case, there is a difference not only in the magnitude but the direction of the two rays. For instance, the photograph through a calcite crystal (top of page) shows a shifted image in the two polarizations; this is due to the optic axis being neither parallel nor normal to the crystal surface. And even when the optic axis is parallel to the surface, this will occur for waves launched at non-normal incidence (as depicted in the explanatory figure). In these cases the two k vectors can be found by solving eq. 6 constrained by the boundary condition which requires that the components of the two transmitted waves' k vectors, and the k vector of the incident wave, as projected onto the surface of the interface, must all be identical. For a uniaxial crystal it will be found that there is not a spatial shift for the ordinary ray (hence its name) which will refract as if the material were non-birefringent with an index the same as the two axes which are not the optic axis. For a biaxial crystal neither ray is deemed "ordinary" nor would generally be refracted according to a refractive index equal to one of the principal axes.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Although related, note that this is not the same as the index ellipsoid.

References

  1. ^ Abramowitz, Mortimer; Davidson, Michael W. "Olympus Microscopy Resource Center". Olympus Life Science Inc. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
  2. ^ See:
    • Erasmus Bartholin, Experimenta crystalli islandici disdiaclastici quibus mira & infolita refractio detegitur [Experiments on birefringent Icelandic crystal through which is detected a remarkable and unique refraction] (Copenhagen, Denmark: Daniel Paulli, 1669).
    • Erasmus Bartholin (January 16, 1671) "An account of sundry experiments made and communicated by that learn'd mathematician, Dr. Erasmus Bartholin, upon a chrystal-like body, sent to him out of Island," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 5 : 2041-2048 (pdf pp 282-289).
  3. ^ A. Fresnel, "Note sur le calcul des teintes que la polarisation développe dans les lames cristallisées" et seq., Annales de Chimie et de Physique, Ser. 2, vol. 17, pp. 102–11 (May 1821), 167–96 (June 1821), 312–15 ("Postscript", July 1821); reprinted (with added section nos.) in Fresnel, 1866–70, vol. 1, pp. 609–48; translated as "On the calculation of the tints that polarization develops in crystalline plates, & postscript", Zenodo4058004 (Creative Commons), 2021; §14.
  4. ^ A. Fresnel, "Extrait d'un Mémoire sur la double réfraction", Annales de Chimie et de Physique, Ser. 2, vol. 28, pp. 263–79 (March 1825); reprinted as "Extrait du second Mémoire sur la double réfraction" in Fresnel, 1866–70, vol. 2, pp. 465–78; translated as "Extract of a [second] memoir on double refraction", Zenodo5442206, 2021 (open access).
  5. ^ a b Landau, L. D., and Lifshitz, E. M., Electrodynamics of Continuous Media, Vol. 8 of the Course of Theoretical Physics 1960 (Pergamon Press), §79
  6. ^ Born & Wolf, 2002, pp. 807–8. (In 19th-century terminology, the ordinary ray is said to be polarized in the plane of the optic axis; but this "plane of polarization" is the plane perpendicular to the vibration; cf. Fresnel, 1827, tr. Hobson, p. 318.)
  7. ^ Brad Amos. Birefringence for facetors I: what is birefringence? December 14, 2013, at the Wayback Machine First published in StoneChat, the Journal of the UK Facet Cutter's Guild. January–March. edition 2005.
  8. ^ a b c Elert, Glenn (2021). "Refraction". The Physics Hypertextbook.
  9. ^ Neves, N. M. (1998). "The use of birefringence for predicting the stiffness of injection molded polycarbonate discs". Polymer Engineering & Science. 38 (10): 1770–1777. doi:10.1002/pen.10347.
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  11. ^ Sano, Y (1988). "Optical anistropy of bovine serum albumin". J. Colloid Interface Sci. 124 (2): 403–407. Bibcode:1988JCIS..124..403S. doi:10.1016/0021-9797(88)90178-6.
  12. ^ Hobbs, Peter Victor (2010). Ice physics. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-19-958771-1.
  13. ^ Frattini, P. L.; Fuller, G. G. (1984). "A note on phase‐modulated flow birefringence: a promising rheo‐optical method". Journal of Rheology. 28 (1): 61–70. Bibcode:1984JRheo..28...61F. doi:10.1122/1.549768.
  14. ^ Doyle, P. S.; Shaqfeh, E. S. G.; McKinley, G. H.; Spiegelberg, S. H. (1998). "Relaxation of dilute polymer solutions following extensional flow". Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics. 76 (1–3): 79–110. doi:10.1016/S0377-0257(97)00113-4.
  15. ^ Frances Lixey, Mary (1983-06-01). "Inexpensive Compensator for a Polarizing Microscope". Laboratory Medicine. Oxford University Press (OUP). 14 (6): 382. doi:10.1093/labmed/14.6.382. ISSN 0007-5027.
  16. ^ Hardy RH, Nation B (June 1984). "Acute gout and the accident and emergency department". Arch Emerg Med. 1 (2): 89–95. doi:10.1136/emj.1.2.89. PMC 1285204. PMID 6536274.
  17. ^ The Approach to the Painful Joint Workup Author: Alan N. Baer; Chief Editor: Herbert S. Diamond. Updated: Nov 22, 2010.
  18. ^ McBride, Jeffrey M.; Hackmann, Michael J.; Nimphius, Sophia; Cense, Barry (2022). "In vivo PS-OCT needle probe scan of human skeletal muscle". Biomedical Optics Express. 13 (3): 1386–1397. doi:10.1364/BOE.446169. PMC 8973164. PMID 35414965 – via Optica.
  19. ^ Reed M. Jost; Joost Felius; Eileen E. Birch (August 2014). "High sensitivity of binocular retinal birefringence screening for anisometropic amblyopia without strabismus". Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. 18 (4): e5–e6. doi:10.1016/j.jaapos.2014.07.017.
  20. ^ Cense, Barry; Wang, Qiang; Lee, Sangyeol; Zhao, Liang; Elsner, Ann E.; Hitzenberger, Christoph K.; Miller, Donald T. (2013-11-01). "Henle fiber layer phase retardation measured with polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography". Biomedical Optics Express. 4 (11): 2296–2306. doi:10.1364/BOE.4.002296. ISSN 2156-7085. PMC 3829392. PMID 24298395.
  21. ^ Cense, Barry; Chen, Teresa C.; Park, B. Hyle; Pierce, Mark C.; Boer, Johannes F. de (2004-08-01). "Thickness and Birefringence of Healthy Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Tissue Measured with Polarization-Sensitive Optical Coherence Tomography". Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 45 (8): 2606–2612. doi:10.1167/iovs.03-1160. ISSN 1552-5783. PMID 15277483.
  22. ^ Afsharan, Hadi; Hackmann, Michael J.; Wang, Qiang; Navaeipour, Farzaneh; Jayasree, Stephy Vijaya Kumar; Zawadzki, Robert J.; Silva, Dilusha; Joo, Chulmin; Cense, Barry (2021-07-01). "Polarization properties of retinal blood vessel walls measured with polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography". Biomedical Optics Express. 12 (7): 4340–4362. doi:10.1364/BOE.426079. ISSN 2156-7085. PMC 8367251. PMID 34457418.
  23. ^ Gianaroli L.; Magli M. C.; Ferraretti A. P.; et al. (December 2008). "Birefringence characteristics in sperm heads allow for the selection of reacted spermatozoa for intracytoplasmic sperm injection". Fertil. Steril. 93 (3): 807–13. doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2008.10.024. PMID 19064263.
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  25. ^ Beckley, Amber M.; Brown, Thomas G.; Alonso, Miguel A. (2010-05-10). "Full Poincaré beams". Optics Express. 18 (10): 10777–10785. Bibcode:2010OExpr..1810777B. doi:10.1364/OE.18.010777. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 20588931.
  26. ^ Born & Wolf, 2002, §15.3.3
  27. ^ a b M.V. Berry and M.R. Jeffrey, "Conical diffraction: Hamilton's diabolical point at the heart of crystal optics", in E. Wolf (ed.), Progress in Optics, vol. 50, Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2007, pp.13–50, doi:10.1016/S0079-6638(07)50002-8, at pp.20–21.

Bibliography

  • M. Born and E. Wolf, 2002, Principles of Optics, 7th Ed., Cambridge University Press, 1999 (reprinted with corrections, 2002).
  • A. Fresnel, 1827, "Mémoire sur la double réfraction", Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de l'Institut de France, vol. VII (for 1824, printed 1827), pp. 45–176; reprinted as "Second mémoire..." in Fresnel, 1866–70, vol. 2, pp. 479–596; translated by A.W. Hobson as "Memoir on double refraction", in R. Taylor (ed.), Scientific Memoirs, vol. V (London: Taylor & Francis, 1852), pp. 238–333. (Cited page numbers are from the translation.)
  • A. Fresnel (ed. H. de Sénarmont, E. Verdet, and L. Fresnel), 1866–70, Oeuvres complètes d'Augustin Fresnel (3 volumes), Paris: Imprimerie Impériale; vol. 1 (1866), vol. 2 (1868), vol. 3 (1870).

External links

  • Stress Analysis Apparatus (based on Birefringence theory)
  • Video of stress birefringence in Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA or Plexiglas).
  • Artist Austine Wood Comarow employs birefringence to create kinetic figurative images.
  • Merrifield, Michael. "Birefringence". Sixty Symbols. Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham.
  • The Birefringence of Thin Ice (Tom Wagner, photographer)

birefringence, optical, property, material, having, refractive, index, that, depends, polarization, propagation, direction, light, these, optically, anisotropic, materials, said, birefringent, birefractive, birefringence, often, quantified, maximum, difference. Birefringence is the optical property of a material having a refractive index that depends on the polarization and propagation direction of light 1 These optically anisotropic materials are said to be birefringent or birefractive The birefringence is often quantified as the maximum difference between refractive indices exhibited by the material Crystals with non cubic crystal structures are often birefringent as are plastics under mechanical stress A calcite crystal laid upon a graph paper with blue lines showing the double refraction In this example optic axis along the surface is shown perpendicular to plane of incidence Incoming light in the s polarization which means perpendicular to plane of incidence and so in this example becomes parallel polarisation to optic axis thus is called extraordinary ray sees a greater refractive index than light in the p polarization which becomes ordinary ray because perpendicular polarisation to optic axis and so s polarization ray is undergoing greater refraction on entering and exiting the crystal Birefringence is responsible for the phenomenon of double refraction whereby a ray of light when incident upon a birefringent material is split by polarization into two rays taking slightly different paths This effect was first described by Danish scientist Rasmus Bartholin in 1669 who observed it 2 in calcite a crystal having one of the strongest birefringences In the 19th century Augustin Jean Fresnel described the phenomenon in terms of polarization understanding light as a wave with field components in transverse polarization perpendicular to the direction of the wave vector 3 4 Parametric down conversion is a phenomenon similar to birefringence arising in nonlinear crystals in the presence of an electromagnetic field Contents 1 Explanation 1 1 Uniaxial materials 1 2 Biaxial materials 1 3 Double refraction 2 Terminology 2 1 Fast and slow rays 2 2 Positive or negative 3 Sources of optical birefringence 4 Common birefringent materials 5 Measurement 6 Applications 6 1 Medicine 6 2 Stress induced birefringence 6 3 Other cases of birefringence 7 Theory 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksExplanation Edit Doubly refracted image as seen through a calcite crystal seen through a rotating polarizing filter illustrating the opposite polarization states of the two images A mathematical description of wave propagation in a birefringent medium is presented below Following is a qualitative explanation of the phenomenon Uniaxial materials Edit The simplest type of birefringence is described as uniaxial meaning that there is a single direction governing the optical anisotropy whereas all directions perpendicular to it or at a given angle to it are optically equivalent Thus rotating the material around this axis does not change its optical behaviour This special direction is known as the optic axis of the material Light propagating parallel to the optic axis whose polarization is always perpendicular to the optic axis is governed by a refractive index no for ordinary regardless of its specific polarization For rays with any other propagation direction there is one linear polarization that would be perpendicular to the optic axis and a ray with that polarization is called an ordinary ray and is governed by the same refractive index value no For a ray propagating in the same direction but with a polarization perpendicular to that of the ordinary ray the polarization direction will be partly in the direction of the optic axis and this extraordinary ray will be governed by a different direction dependent refractive index Because the index of refraction depends on the polarization when unpolarized light enters a uniaxial birefringent material it is split into two beams travelling in different directions one having the polarization of the ordinary ray and the other the polarization of the extraordinary ray The ordinary ray will always experience a refractive index of no whereas the refractive index of the extraordinary ray will be in between no and ne depending on the ray direction as described by the index ellipsoid The magnitude of the difference is quantified by the birefringence verification needed D n n e n o displaystyle Delta n n mathrm e n mathrm o The propagation as well as reflection coefficient of the ordinary ray is simply described by no as if there were no birefringence involved The extraordinary ray as its name suggests propagates unlike any wave in an isotropic optical material Its refraction and reflection at a surface can be understood using the effective refractive index a value in between no and ne Its power flow given by the Poynting vector is not exactly in the direction of the wave vector This causes an additional shift in that beam even when launched at normal incidence as is popularly observed using a crystal of calcite as photographed above Rotating the calcite crystal will cause one of the two images that of the extraordinary ray to rotate slightly around that of the ordinary ray which remains fixed verification needed When the light propagates either along or orthogonal to the optic axis such a lateral shift does not occur In the first case both polarizations are perpendicular to the optic axis and see the same effective refractive index so there is no extraordinary ray In the second case the extraordinary ray propagates at a different phase velocity corresponding to ne but still has the power flow in the direction of the wave vector A crystal with its optic axis in this orientation parallel to the optical surface may be used to create a waveplate in which there is no distortion of the image but an intentional modification of the state of polarization of the incident wave For instance a quarter wave plate is commonly used to create circular polarization from a linearly polarized source Biaxial materials Edit The case of so called biaxial crystals is substantially more complex 5 These are characterized by three refractive indices corresponding to three principal axes of the crystal For most ray directions both polarizations would be classified as extraordinary rays but with different effective refractive indices Being extraordinary waves the direction of power flow is not identical to the direction of the wave vector in either case The two refractive indices can be determined using the index ellipsoids for given directions of the polarization Note that for biaxial crystals the index ellipsoid will not be an ellipsoid of revolution spheroid but is described by three unequal principle refractive indices na nb and ng Thus there is no axis around which a rotation leaves the optical properties invariant as there is with uniaxial crystals whose index ellipsoid is a spheroid Although there is no axis of symmetry there are two optical axes or binormals which are defined as directions along which light may propagate without birefringence i e directions along which the wavelength is independent of polarization 5 For this reason birefringent materials with three distinct refractive indices are called biaxial Additionally there are two distinct axes known as optical ray axes or biradials along which the group velocity of the light is independent of polarization Double refraction Edit When an arbitrary beam of light strikes the surface of a birefringent material at non normal incidence the polarization component normal to the optic axis ordinary ray and the other linear polarization extraordinary ray will be refracted toward somewhat different paths Natural light so called unpolarized light consists of equal amounts of energy in any two orthogonal polarizations Even linearly polarized light has some energy in both polarizations unless aligned along one of the two axes of birefringence According to Snell s law of refraction the two angles of refraction are governed by the effective refractive index of each of these two polarizations This is clearly seen for instance in the Wollaston prism which separates incoming light into two linear polarizations using prisms composed of a birefringent material such as calcite The different angles of refraction for the two polarization components are shown in the figure at the top of this page with the optic axis along the surface and perpendicular to the plane of incidence so that the angle of refraction is different for the p polarization the ordinary ray in this case having its electric vector perpendicular to the optic axis and the s polarization the extraordinary ray in this case whose electric field polarization includes a component in the direction of the optic axis In addition a distinct form of double refraction occurs even with normal incidence in cases where the optic axis is not along the refracting surface nor exactly normal to it in this case the dielectric polarization of the birefringent material is not exactly in the direction of the wave s electric field for the extraordinary ray The direction of power flow given by the Poynting vector for this inhomogenous wave is at a finite angle from the direction of the wave vector resulting in an additional separation between these beams So even in the case of normal incidence where one would compute the angle of refraction as zero according to Snell s law regardless of the effective index of refraction the energy of the extraordinary ray is propagated at an angle If exiting the crystal through a face parallel to the incoming face the direction of both rays will be restored but leaving a shift between the two beams This is commonly observed using a piece of calcite cut along its natural cleavage placed above a paper with writing as in the above photographs On the contrary waveplates specifically have their optic axis along the surface of the plate so that with approximately normal incidence there will be no shift in the image from light of either polarization simply a relative phase shift between the two light waves Terminology Edit Comparison of positive and negative birefringence In positive birefringence figure 1 the ordinary ray p polarisation in this case w r t magenta coloured plane of incidence perpendicular to optic axis A is the fast ray F while the extraordinary ray s polarisation in this case and parallel to optic axis A is the slow ray S In negative birefringence figure 2 it is the reverse Much of the work involving polarization preceded the understanding of light as a transverse electromagnetic wave and this has affected some terminology in use Isotropic materials have symmetry in all directions and the refractive index is the same for any polarization direction An anisotropic material is called birefringent because it will generally refract a single incoming ray in two directions which we now understand correspond to the two different polarizations This is true of either a uniaxial or biaxial material In a uniaxial material one ray behaves according to the normal law of refraction corresponding to the ordinary refractive index so an incoming ray at normal incidence remains normal to the refracting surface As explained above the other polarization can deviate from normal incidence which cannot be described using the law of refraction This thus became known as the extraordinary ray The terms ordinary and extraordinary are still applied to the polarization components perpendicular to and not perpendicular to the optic axis respectively even in cases where no double refraction is involved A material is termed uniaxial when it has a single direction of symmetry in its optical behavior which we term the optic axis It also happens to be the axis of symmetry of the index ellipsoid a spheroid in this case The index ellipsoid could still be described according to the refractive indices na nb and ng along three coordinate axes in this case two are equal So if na nb corresponding to the x and y axes then the extraordinary index is ng corresponding to the z axis which is also called the optic axis in this case Materials in which all three refractive indices are different are termed biaxial and the origin of this term is more complicated and frequently misunderstood In a uniaxial crystal different polarization components of a beam will travel at different phase velocities except for rays in the direction of what we call the optic axis Thus the optic axis has the particular property that rays in that direction do not exhibit birefringence with all polarizations in such a beam experiencing the same index of refraction It is very different when the three principal refractive indices are all different then an incoming ray in any of those principal directions will still encounter two different refractive indices But it turns out that there are two special directions at an angle to all of the 3 axes where the refractive indices for different polarizations are again equal For this reason these crystals were designated as biaxial with the two axes in this case referring to ray directions in which propagation does not experience birefringence Fast and slow rays Edit In a birefringent material a wave consists of two polarization components which generally are governed by different effective refractive indices The so called slow ray is the component for which the material has the higher effective refractive index slower phase velocity while the fast ray is the one with a lower effective refractive index When a beam is incident on such a material from air or any material with a lower refractive index the slow ray is thus refracted more towards the normal than the fast ray In the example figure at top of this page it can be seen that refracted ray with s polarization with its electric vibration along the direction of the optic axis thus called the extraordinary ray 6 is the slow ray in given scenario Using a thin slab of that material at normal incidence one would implement a waveplate In this case there is essentially no spatial separation between the polarizations the phase of the wave in the parallel polarization the slow ray will be retarded with respect to the perpendicular polarization These directions are thus known as the slow axis and fast axis of the waveplate Positive or negative Edit Uniaxial birefringence is classified as positive when the extraordinary index of refraction ne is greater than the ordinary index no Negative birefringence means that Dn ne no is less than zero 7 In other words the polarization of the fast or slow wave is perpendicular to the optic axis when the birefringence of the crystal is positive or negative respectively In the case of biaxial crystals all three of the principal axes have different refractive indices so this designation does not apply But for any defined ray direction one can just as well designate the fast and slow ray polarizations Sources of optical birefringence Edit View from under the Sky Pool London with coloured fringes due to stress birefringence of partially polarised skylight through a circular polariser While the best known source of birefringence is the entrance of light into an anisotropic crystal it can result in otherwise optically isotropic materials in a few ways Stress birefringence results when a normally isotropic solid is stressed and deformed i e stretched or bent causing a loss of physical isotropy and consequently a loss of isotropy in the material s permittivity tensor Form birefringence whereby structure elements such as rods having one refractive index are suspended in a medium with a different refractive index When the lattice spacing is much smaller than a wavelength such a structure is described as a metamaterial By the Pockels or Kerr effect whereby an applied electric field induces birefringence due to nonlinear optics By the self or forced alignment into thin films of amphiphilic molecules such as lipids some surfactants or liquid crystals citation needed Circular birefringence takes place generally not in materials which are anisotropic but rather ones which are chiral This can include liquids where there is an enantiomeric excess of a chiral molecule that is one that has stereo isomers By the Faraday effect where a longitudinal magnetic field causes some materials to become circularly birefringent having slightly different indices of refraction for left and right handed circular polarizations similar to optical activity while the field is applied Common birefringent materials Edit Sandwiched in between crossed polarizers clear polystyrene cutlery exhibits wavelength dependent birefringence The best characterized birefringent materials are crystals Due to their specific crystal structures their refractive indices are well defined Depending on the symmetry of a crystal structure as determined by one of the 32 possible crystallographic point groups crystals in that group may be forced to be isotropic not birefringent to have uniaxial symmetry or neither in which case it is a biaxial crystal The crystal structures permitting uniaxial and biaxial birefringence are noted in the two tables below listing the two or three principal refractive indices at wavelength 590 nm of some better known crystals 8 In addition to induced birefringence while under stress many plastics obtain permanent birefringence during manufacture due to stresses which are frozen in due to mechanical forces present when the plastic is molded or extruded 9 For example ordinary cellophane is birefringent Polarizers are routinely used to detect stress either applied or frozen in in plastics such as polystyrene and polycarbonate Cotton fiber is birefringent because of high levels of cellulosic material in the fibre s secondary cell wall which is directionally aligned with the cotton fibers Polarized light microscopy is commonly used in biological tissue as many biological materials are linearly or circularly birefringent Collagen found in cartilage tendon bone corneas and several other areas in the body is birefringent and commonly studied with polarized light microscopy 10 Some proteins are also birefringent exhibiting form birefringence 11 Inevitable manufacturing imperfections in optical fiber leads to birefringence which is one cause of pulse broadening in fiber optic communications Such imperfections can be geometrical lack of circular symmetry or due to unequal lateral stress applied to the optical fibre Birefringence is intentionally introduced for instance by making the cross section elliptical in order to produce polarization maintaining optical fibers Birefringence can be induced or corrected in optical fibers through bending them which causes anisotropy in form and stress given the axis around which it is bent and radius of curvature In addition to anisotropy in the electric polarizability that we have been discussing anisotropy in the magnetic permeability could be a source of birefringence At optical frequencies there is no measurable magnetic polarizability m m0 of natural materials so this is not an actual source of birefringence at optical wavelengths Uniaxial crystals at 590 nm 8 Material Crystal system no ne Dnbarium borate BaB2O4 Trigonal 1 6776 1 5534 0 1242beryl Be3Al2 SiO3 6 Hexagonal 1 602 1 557 0 045calcite CaCO3 Trigonal 1 658 1 486 0 172ice H2O Hexagonal 1 3090 1 3104 0 0014 12 lithium niobate LiNbO3 Trigonal 2 272 2 187 0 085magnesium fluoride MgF2 Tetragonal 1 380 1 385 0 006quartz SiO2 Trigonal 1 544 1 553 0 009ruby Al2O3 Trigonal 1 770 1 762 0 008rutile TiO2 Tetragonal 2 616 2 903 0 287sapphire Al2O3 Trigonal 1 768 1 760 0 008silicon carbide SiC Hexagonal 2 647 2 693 0 046tourmaline complex silicate Trigonal 1 669 1 638 0 031zircon high ZrSiO4 Tetragonal 1 960 2 015 0 055zircon low ZrSiO4 Tetragonal 1 920 1 967 0 047 Biaxial crystals at 590 nm 8 Material Crystal system na nb ngborax Na2 B4O5 OH 4 8H2O Monoclinic 1 447 1 469 1 472epsom salt MgSO4 7H2O Monoclinic 1 433 1 455 1 461mica biotite K Mg Fe 3 AlSi3O10 F OH 2 Monoclinic 1 595 1 640 1 640mica muscovite KAl2 AlSi3O10 F OH 2 Monoclinic 1 563 1 596 1 601olivine Mg Fe 2SiO4 Orthorhombic 1 640 1 660 1 680perovskite CaTiO3 Orthorhombic 2 300 2 340 2 380topaz Al2SiO4 F OH 2 Orthorhombic 1 618 1 620 1 627ulexite NaCaB5O6 OH 6 5H2O Triclinic 1 490 1 510 1 520Measurement EditBirefringence and other polarization based optical effects such as optical rotation and linear or circular dichroism can be observed by measuring any change in the polarization of light passing through the material These measurements are known as polarimetry Polarized light microscopes which contain two polarizers that are at 90 to each other on either side of the sample are used to visualize birefringence since light that has not been affected by birefringence remains in a polarization that is totally rejected by the second polarizer analyzer The addition of quarter wave plates permits examination using circularly polarized light Determination of the change in polarization state using such an apparatus is the basis of ellipsometry by which the optical properties of specular surfaces can be gauged through reflection Birefringence measurements have been made with phase modulated systems for examining the transient flow behaviour of fluids 13 14 Birefringence of lipid bilayers can be measured using dual polarization interferometry This provides a measure of the degree of order within these fluid layers and how this order is disrupted when the layer interacts with other biomolecules For the 3D measurement of birefringence a technique based on holographic tomography 1 can be used Applications Edit Reflective twisted nematic liquid crystal display Light reflected by the surface 6 or coming from a backlight is horizontally polarized 5 and passes through the liquid crystal modulator 3 sandwiched in between transparent layers 2 4 containing electrodes Horizontally polarized light is blocked by the vertically oriented polarizer 1 except where its polarization has been rotated by the liquid crystal 3 appearing bright to the viewer Birefringence is used in many optical devices Liquid crystal displays the most common sort of flat panel display cause their pixels to become lighter or darker through rotation of the polarization circular birefringence of linearly polarized light as viewed through a sheet polarizer at the screen s surface Similarly light modulators modulate the intensity of light through electrically induced birefringence of polarized light followed by a polarizer The Lyot filter is a specialized narrowband spectral filter employing the wavelength dependence of birefringence Waveplates are thin birefringent sheets widely used in certain optical equipment for modifying the polarization state of light passing through it Birefringence also plays an important role in second harmonic generation and other nonlinear optical components as the crystals used for this purpose are almost always birefringent By adjusting the angle of incidence the effective refractive index of the extraordinary ray can be tuned in order to achieve phase matching which is required for the efficient operation of these devices Medicine Edit Birefringence is utilized in medical diagnostics One powerful accessory used with optical microscopes is a pair of crossed polarizing filters Light from the source is polarized in the x direction after passing through the first polarizer but above the specimen is a polarizer a so called analyzer oriented in the y direction Therefore no light from the source will be accepted by the analyzer and the field will appear dark Areas of the sample possessing birefringence will generally couple some of the x polarized light into the y polarization these areas will then appear bright against the dark background Modifications to this basic principle can differentiate between positive and negative birefringence Gout and pseudogout crystals viewed under a microscope with a red compensator which slows red light in one orientation labeled polarized light axis 15 Urate crystals left image in gout appear yellow when their long axis is parallel to the slow transmission axis of the red compensator and appear blue when perpendicular The opposite colors are seen in calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease pseudogout right image blue when parallel and yellow when perpendicular For instance needle aspiration of fluid from a gouty joint will reveal negatively birefringent monosodium urate crystals Calcium pyrophosphate crystals in contrast show weak positive birefringence 16 Urate crystals appear yellow and calcium pyrophosphate crystals appear blue when their long axes are aligned parallel to that of a red compensator filter 17 or a crystal of known birefringence is added to the sample for comparison The birefringence of tissue inside a living human thigh was measured using polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography at 1310 nm and a single mode fiber in a needle Skeletal muscle birefringence was Dn 1 79 10 3 0 18 10 3 adipose Dn 0 07 10 3 0 50 10 3 superficial aponeurosis Dn 5 08 10 3 0 73 10 3 and interstitial tissue Dn 0 65 10 3 0 39 10 3 18 These measurements may be important for the development of a less invasive method to diagnose Duchenne muscular dystrophy Birefringence can be observed in amyloid plaques such as are found in the brains of Alzheimer s patients when stained with a dye such as Congo Red Modified proteins such as immunoglobulin light chains abnormally accumulate between cells forming fibrils Multiple folds of these fibers line up and take on a beta pleated sheet conformation Congo red dye intercalates between the folds and when observed under polarized light causes birefringence In ophthalmology binocular retinal birefringence screening of the Henle fibers photoreceptor axons that go radially outward from the fovea provides a reliable detection of strabismus and possibly also of anisometropic amblyopia 19 In healthy subjects the maximum retardation induced by the Henle fiber layer is approximately 22 degrees at 840 nm 20 Furthermore scanning laser polarimetry uses the birefringence of the optic nerve fibre layer to indirectly quantify its thickness which is of use in the assessment and monitoring of glaucoma Polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography measurements obtained from healthy human subjects have demonstrated a change in birefringence of the retinal nerve fiber layer as a function of location around the optic nerve head 21 The same technology was recently applied in the living human retina to quantify the polarization properties of vessel walls near the optic nerve 22 Birefringence characteristics in sperm heads allow the selection of spermatozoa for intracytoplasmic sperm injection 23 Likewise zona imaging uses birefringence on oocytes to select the ones with highest chances of successful pregnancy 24 Birefringence of particles biopsied from pulmonary nodules indicates silicosis Dermatologists use dermatoscopes to view skin lesions Dermoscopes use polarized light allowing the user to view crystalline structures corresponding to dermal collagen in the skin These structures may appear as shiny white lines or rosette shapes and are only visible under polarized dermoscopy Stress induced birefringence Edit Color pattern of a plastic box with frozen in mechanical stress placed between two crossed polarizers Isotropic solids do not exhibit birefringence When they are under mechanical stress birefringence results The stress can be applied externally or is frozen in after a birefringent plastic ware is cooled after it is manufactured using injection molding When such a sample is placed between two crossed polarizers colour patterns can be observed because polarization of a light ray is rotated after passing through a birefringent material and the amount of rotation is dependent on wavelength The experimental method called photoelasticity used for analyzing stress distribution in solids is based on the same principle There has been recent research on using stress induced birefringence in a glass plate to generate an Optical vortex and full Poincare beams optical beams that have every possible polarization state across a cross section 25 Other cases of birefringence Edit Birefringent rutile observed in different polarizations using a rotating polarizer or analyzer Birefringence is observed in anisotropic elastic materials In these materials the two polarizations split according to their effective refractive indices which are also sensitive to stress The study of birefringence in shear waves traveling through the solid Earth the Earth s liquid core does not support shear waves is widely used in seismology citation needed Birefringence is widely used in mineralogy to identify rocks minerals and gemstones citation needed Theory Edit Surface of the allowed k vectors for a fixed frequency for a biaxial crystal see eq 7 In an isotropic medium including free space the so called electric displacement D is just proportional to the electric field E according to D ɛE where the material s permittivity e is just a scalar and equal to n2e0 where n is the index of refraction In an anisotropic material exhibiting birefringence the relationship between D and E must now be described using a tensor equation D e E displaystyle mathbf D boldsymbol varepsilon mathbf E 1 where e is now a 3 3 permittivity tensor We assume linearity and no magnetic permeability in the medium m m0 The electric field of a plane wave of angular frequency w can be written in the general form E E 0 e i k r w t displaystyle mathbf E mathbf E 0 e i mathbf k cdot mathbf r omega t 2 where r is the position vector t is time and E0 is a vector describing the electric field at r 0 t 0 Then we shall find the possible wave vectors k By combining Maxwell s equations for E and H we can eliminate H 1 m0 B to obtain E m 0 2 t 2 D displaystyle nabla times nabla times mathbf E mu 0 frac partial 2 partial t 2 mathbf D 3a With no free charges Maxwell s equation for the divergence of D vanishes D 0 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf D 0 3b We can apply the vector identity A A 2A to the left hand side of eq 3a and use the spatial dependence in which each differentiation in x for instance results in multiplication by ikx to find E k E k k k E displaystyle nabla times nabla times mathbf E mathbf k cdot mathbf E mathbf k mathbf k cdot mathbf k mathbf E 3c The right hand side of eq 3a can be expressed in terms of E through application of the permittivity tensor e and noting that differentiation in time results in multiplication by iw eq 3a then becomes k k E k E k m 0 w 2 e E displaystyle mathbf k cdot mathbf k mathbf E mathbf k cdot mathbf E mathbf k mu 0 omega 2 boldsymbol varepsilon mathbf E 4a Applying the differentiation rule to eq 3b we find k D 0 displaystyle mathbf k cdot mathbf D 0 4b Eq 4b indicates that D is orthogonal to the direction of the wavevector k even though that is no longer generally true for E as would be the case in an isotropic medium Eq 4b will not be needed for the further steps in the following derivation Finding the allowed values of k for a given w is easiest done by using Cartesian coordinates with the x y and z axes chosen in the directions of the symmetry axes of the crystal or simply choosing z in the direction of the optic axis of a uniaxial crystal resulting in a diagonal matrix for the permittivity tensor e e e 0 n x 2 0 0 0 n y 2 0 0 0 n z 2 displaystyle mathbf varepsilon varepsilon 0 begin bmatrix n x 2 amp 0 amp 0 0 amp n y 2 amp 0 0 amp 0 amp n z 2 end bmatrix 4c where the diagonal values are squares of the refractive indices for polarizations along the three principal axes x y and z With e in this form and substituting in the speed of light c using c2 1 m0e0 the x component of the vector equation eq 4a becomes k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 E x k x 2 E x k x k y E y k x k z E z w 2 n x 2 c 2 E x displaystyle left k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 right E x k x 2 E x k x k y E y k x k z E z frac omega 2 n x 2 c 2 E x 5a where Ex Ey Ez are the components of E at any given position in space and time and kx ky kz are the components of k Rearranging we can write and similarly for the y and z components of eq 4a k y 2 k z 2 w 2 n x 2 c 2 E x k x k y E y k x k z E z 0 displaystyle left k y 2 k z 2 frac omega 2 n x 2 c 2 right E x k x k y E y k x k z E z 0 5b k x k y E x k x 2 k z 2 w 2 n y 2 c 2 E y k y k z E z 0 displaystyle k x k y E x left k x 2 k z 2 frac omega 2 n y 2 c 2 right E y k y k z E z 0 5c k x k z E x k y k z E y k x 2 k y 2 w 2 n z 2 c 2 E z 0 displaystyle k x k z E x k y k z E y left k x 2 k y 2 frac omega 2 n z 2 c 2 right E z 0 5d This is a set of linear equations in Ex Ey Ez so it can have a nontrivial solution that is one other than E 0 as long as the following determinant is zero k y 2 k z 2 w 2 n x 2 c 2 k x k y k x k z k x k y k x 2 k z 2 w 2 n y 2 c 2 k y k z k x k z k y k z k x 2 k y 2 w 2 n z 2 c 2 0 displaystyle begin vmatrix left k y 2 k z 2 frac omega 2 n x 2 c 2 right amp k x k y amp k x k z k x k y amp left k x 2 k z 2 frac omega 2 n y 2 c 2 right amp k y k z k x k z amp k y k z amp left k x 2 k y 2 frac omega 2 n z 2 c 2 right end vmatrix 0 6 Evaluating the determinant of eq 6 and rearranging the terms according to the powers of w 2 c 2 displaystyle frac omega 2 c 2 the constant terms cancel After eliminating the common factor w 2 c 2 displaystyle frac omega 2 c 2 from the remaining terms we obtain w 4 c 4 w 2 c 2 k x 2 k y 2 n z 2 k x 2 k z 2 n y 2 k y 2 k z 2 n x 2 k x 2 n y 2 n z 2 k y 2 n x 2 n z 2 k z 2 n x 2 n y 2 k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 0 displaystyle frac omega 4 c 4 frac omega 2 c 2 left frac k x 2 k y 2 n z 2 frac k x 2 k z 2 n y 2 frac k y 2 k z 2 n x 2 right left frac k x 2 n y 2 n z 2 frac k y 2 n x 2 n z 2 frac k z 2 n x 2 n y 2 right left k x 2 k y 2 k z 2 right 0 7 In the case of a uniaxial material choosing the optic axis to be in the z direction so that nx ny no and nz ne this expression can be factored into k x 2 n o 2 k y 2 n o 2 k z 2 n o 2 w 2 c 2 k x 2 n e 2 k y 2 n e 2 k z 2 n o 2 w 2 c 2 0 displaystyle left frac k x 2 n mathrm o 2 frac k y 2 n mathrm o 2 frac k z 2 n mathrm o 2 frac omega 2 c 2 right left frac k x 2 n mathrm e 2 frac k y 2 n mathrm e 2 frac k z 2 n mathrm o 2 frac omega 2 c 2 right 0 8 Setting either of the factors in eq 8 to zero will define an ellipsoidal surface note 1 in the space of wavevectors k that are allowed for a given w The first factor being zero defines a sphere this is the solution for so called ordinary rays in which the effective refractive index is exactly no regardless of the direction of k The second defines a spheroid symmetric about the z axis This solution corresponds to the so called extraordinary rays in which the effective refractive index is in between no and ne depending on the direction of k Therefore for any arbitrary direction of propagation other than in the direction of the optic axis two distinct wavevectors k are allowed corresponding to the polarizations of the ordinary and extraordinary rays For a biaxial material a similar but more complicated condition on the two waves can be described 26 the locus of allowed k vectors the wavevector surface is a 4th degree two sheeted surface so that in a given direction there are generally two permitted k vectors and their opposites 27 By inspection one can see that eq 6 is generally satisfied for two positive values of w Or for a specified optical frequency w and direction normal to the wavefronts k k it is satisfied for two wavenumbers or propagation constants k and thus effective refractive indices corresponding to the propagation of two linear polarizations in that direction When those two propagation constants are equal then the effective refractive index is independent of polarization and there is consequently no birefringence encountered by a wave traveling in that particular direction For a uniaxial crystal this is the optic axis the z direction according to the above construction But when all three refractive indices or permittivities nx ny and nz are distinct it can be shown that there are exactly two such directions where the two sheets of the wave vector surface touch 27 these directions are not at all obvious and do not lie along any of the three principal axes x y z according to the above convention Historically that accounts for the use of the term biaxial for such crystals as the existence of exactly two such special directions considered axes was discovered well before polarization and birefringence were understood physically These two special directions are generally not of particular interest biaxial crystals are rather specified by their three refractive indices corresponding to the three axes of symmetry A general state of polarization launched into the medium can always be decomposed into two waves one in each of those two polarizations which will then propagate with different wavenumbers k Applying the different phase of propagation to those two waves over a specified propagation distance will result in a generally different net polarization state at that point this is the principle of the waveplate for instance With a waveplate there is no spatial displacement between the two rays as their k vectors are still in the same direction That is true when each of the two polarizations is either normal to the optic axis the ordinary ray or parallel to it the extraordinary ray In the more general case there is a difference not only in the magnitude but the direction of the two rays For instance the photograph through a calcite crystal top of page shows a shifted image in the two polarizations this is due to the optic axis being neither parallel nor normal to the crystal surface And even when the optic axis is parallel to the surface this will occur for waves launched at non normal incidence as depicted in the explanatory figure In these cases the two k vectors can be found by solving eq 6 constrained by the boundary condition which requires that the components of the two transmitted waves k vectors and the k vector of the incident wave as projected onto the surface of the interface must all be identical For a uniaxial crystal it will be found that there is not a spatial shift for the ordinary ray hence its name which will refract as if the material were non birefringent with an index the same as the two axes which are not the optic axis For a biaxial crystal neither ray is deemed ordinary nor would generally be refracted according to a refractive index equal to one of the principal axes See also EditCotton Mouton effect Crystal optics Dichroism Iceland spar Index ellipsoid John Kerr Optical rotation Periodic poling PleochroismNotes Edit Although related note that this is not the same as the index ellipsoid References Edit Abramowitz Mortimer Davidson Michael W Olympus Microscopy Resource Center Olympus Life Science Inc Retrieved 2021 07 21 See Erasmus Bartholin Experimenta crystalli islandici disdiaclastici quibus mira amp infolita refractio detegitur Experiments on birefringent Icelandic crystal through which is detected a remarkable and unique refraction Copenhagen Denmark Daniel Paulli 1669 Erasmus Bartholin January 16 1671 An account of sundry experiments made and communicated by that learn d mathematician Dr Erasmus Bartholin upon a chrystal like body sent to him out of Island Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 5 2041 2048 pdf pp 282 289 A Fresnel Note sur le calcul des teintes que la polarisation developpe dans les lames cristallisees et seq Annales de Chimie et de Physique Ser 2 vol 17 pp 102 11 May 1821 167 96 June 1821 312 15 Postscript July 1821 reprinted with added section nos in Fresnel 1866 70 vol 1 pp 609 48 translated as On the calculation of the tints that polarization develops in crystalline plates amp postscript Zenodo 4058004 Creative Commons 2021 14 A Fresnel Extrait d un Memoire sur la double refraction Annales de Chimie et de Physique Ser 2 vol 28 pp 263 79 March 1825 reprinted as Extrait du second Memoire sur la double refraction in Fresnel 1866 70 vol 2 pp 465 78 translated as Extract of a second memoir on double refraction Zenodo 5442206 2021 open access a b Landau L D and Lifshitz E M Electrodynamics of Continuous Media Vol 8 of the Course of Theoretical Physics 1960 Pergamon Press 79 Born amp Wolf 2002 pp 807 8 In 19th century terminology the ordinary ray is said to be polarized in the plane of the optic axis but this plane of polarization is the plane perpendicular to the vibration cf Fresnel 1827 tr Hobson p 318 Brad Amos Birefringence for facetors I what is birefringence Archived December 14 2013 at the Wayback Machine First published in StoneChat the Journal of the UK Facet Cutter s Guild January March edition 2005 a b c Elert Glenn 2021 Refraction The Physics Hypertextbook Neves N M 1998 The use of birefringence for predicting the stiffness of injection molded polycarbonate discs Polymer Engineering amp Science 38 10 1770 1777 doi 10 1002 pen 10347 Wolman M Kasten F H 1986 Polarized light microscopy in the study of the molecular structure of collagen and reticulin Histochemistry 85 1 41 49 doi 10 1007 bf00508652 PMID 3733471 S2CID 25214054 Sano Y 1988 Optical anistropy of bovine serum albumin J Colloid Interface Sci 124 2 403 407 Bibcode 1988JCIS 124 403S doi 10 1016 0021 9797 88 90178 6 Hobbs Peter Victor 2010 Ice physics New York Oxford University Press p 202 ISBN 978 0 19 958771 1 Frattini P L Fuller G G 1984 A note on phase modulated flow birefringence a promising rheo optical method Journal of Rheology 28 1 61 70 Bibcode 1984JRheo 28 61F doi 10 1122 1 549768 Doyle P S Shaqfeh E S G McKinley G H Spiegelberg S H 1998 Relaxation of dilute polymer solutions following extensional flow Journal of Non Newtonian Fluid Mechanics 76 1 3 79 110 doi 10 1016 S0377 0257 97 00113 4 Frances Lixey Mary 1983 06 01 Inexpensive Compensator for a Polarizing Microscope Laboratory Medicine Oxford University Press OUP 14 6 382 doi 10 1093 labmed 14 6 382 ISSN 0007 5027 Hardy RH Nation B June 1984 Acute gout and the accident and emergency department Arch Emerg Med 1 2 89 95 doi 10 1136 emj 1 2 89 PMC 1285204 PMID 6536274 The Approach to the Painful Joint Workup Author Alan N Baer Chief Editor Herbert S Diamond Updated Nov 22 2010 McBride Jeffrey M Hackmann Michael J Nimphius Sophia Cense Barry 2022 In vivo PS OCT needle probe scan of human skeletal muscle Biomedical Optics Express 13 3 1386 1397 doi 10 1364 BOE 446169 PMC 8973164 PMID 35414965 via Optica Reed M Jost Joost Felius Eileen E Birch August 2014 High sensitivity of binocular retinal birefringence screening for anisometropic amblyopia without strabismus Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus 18 4 e5 e6 doi 10 1016 j jaapos 2014 07 017 Cense Barry Wang Qiang Lee Sangyeol Zhao Liang Elsner Ann E Hitzenberger Christoph K Miller Donald T 2013 11 01 Henle fiber layer phase retardation measured with polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography Biomedical Optics Express 4 11 2296 2306 doi 10 1364 BOE 4 002296 ISSN 2156 7085 PMC 3829392 PMID 24298395 Cense Barry Chen Teresa C Park B Hyle Pierce Mark C Boer Johannes F de 2004 08 01 Thickness and Birefringence of Healthy Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer Tissue Measured with Polarization Sensitive Optical Coherence Tomography Investigative Ophthalmology amp Visual Science 45 8 2606 2612 doi 10 1167 iovs 03 1160 ISSN 1552 5783 PMID 15277483 Afsharan Hadi Hackmann Michael J Wang Qiang Navaeipour Farzaneh Jayasree Stephy Vijaya Kumar Zawadzki Robert J Silva Dilusha Joo Chulmin Cense Barry 2021 07 01 Polarization properties of retinal blood vessel walls measured with polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography Biomedical Optics Express 12 7 4340 4362 doi 10 1364 BOE 426079 ISSN 2156 7085 PMC 8367251 PMID 34457418 Gianaroli L Magli M C Ferraretti A P et al December 2008 Birefringence characteristics in sperm heads allow for the selection of reacted spermatozoa for intracytoplasmic sperm injection Fertil Steril 93 3 807 13 doi 10 1016 j fertnstert 2008 10 024 PMID 19064263 Ebner T Balaban B Moser M et al May 2009 Automatic user independent zona pellucida imaging at the oocyte stage allows for the prediction of preimplantation development Fertil Steril 94 3 913 920 doi 10 1016 j fertnstert 2009 03 106 PMID 19439291 Beckley Amber M Brown Thomas G Alonso Miguel A 2010 05 10 Full Poincare beams Optics Express 18 10 10777 10785 Bibcode 2010OExpr 1810777B doi 10 1364 OE 18 010777 ISSN 1094 4087 PMID 20588931 Born amp Wolf 2002 15 3 3 a b M V Berry and M R Jeffrey Conical diffraction Hamilton s diabolical point at the heart of crystal optics in E Wolf ed Progress in Optics vol 50 Amsterdam Elsevier 2007 pp 13 50 doi 10 1016 S0079 6638 07 50002 8 at pp 20 21 Bibliography EditM Born and E Wolf 2002 Principles of Optics 7th Ed Cambridge University Press 1999 reprinted with corrections 2002 A Fresnel 1827 Memoire sur la double refraction Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences de l Institut de France vol VII for 1824 printed 1827 pp 45 176 reprinted as Second memoire in Fresnel 1866 70 vol 2 pp 479 596 translated by A W Hobson as Memoir on double refraction in R Taylor ed Scientific Memoirs vol V London Taylor amp Francis 1852 pp 238 333 Cited page numbers are from the translation A Fresnel ed H de Senarmont E Verdet and L Fresnel 1866 70 Oeuvres completes d Augustin Fresnel 3 volumes Paris Imprimerie Imperiale vol 1 1866 vol 2 1868 vol 3 1870 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Birefringence Stress Analysis Apparatus based on Birefringence theory 2 Video of stress birefringence in Polymethylmethacrylate PMMA or Plexiglas Artist Austine Wood Comarow employs birefringence to create kinetic figurative images Merrifield Michael Birefringence Sixty Symbols Brady Haran for the University of Nottingham The Birefringence of Thin Ice Tom Wagner photographer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Birefringence amp oldid 1133271882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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