fbpx
Wikipedia

Brewster's angle

Brewster's angle (also known as the polarization angle) is an angle of incidence at which light with a particular polarization is perfectly transmitted through a transparent dielectric surface, with no reflection. When unpolarized light is incident at this angle, the light that is reflected from the surface is therefore perfectly polarized. The angle is named after the Scottish physicist Sir David Brewster (1781–1868).[1][2]

An illustration of the polarization of light that is incident on an interface at Brewster's angle.

Explanation edit

When light encounters a boundary between two media with different refractive indices, some of it is usually reflected as shown in the figure above. The fraction that is reflected is described by the Fresnel equations, and depends on the incoming light's polarization and angle of incidence.

The Fresnel equations predict that light with the p polarization (electric field polarized in the same plane as the incident ray and the surface normal at the point of incidence) will not be reflected if the angle of incidence is

 

where n1 is the refractive index of the initial medium through which the light propagates (the "incident medium"), and n2 is the index of the other medium. This equation is known as Brewster's law, and the angle defined by it is Brewster's angle.

The physical mechanism for this can be qualitatively understood from the manner in which electric dipoles in the media respond to p-polarized light. One can imagine that light incident on the surface is absorbed, and then re-radiated by oscillating electric dipoles at the interface between the two media. The polarization of freely propagating light is always perpendicular to the direction in which the light is travelling. The dipoles that produce the transmitted (refracted) light oscillate in the polarization direction of that light. These same oscillating dipoles also generate the reflected light. However, dipoles do not radiate any energy in the direction of the dipole moment. If the refracted light is p-polarized and propagates exactly perpendicular to the direction in which the light is predicted to be specularly reflected, the dipoles point along the specular reflection direction and therefore no light can be reflected. (See diagram, above)

With simple geometry this condition can be expressed as

 

where θ1 is the angle of reflection (or incidence) and θ2 is the angle of refraction.

Using Snell's law,

 

one can calculate the incident angle θ1 = θB at which no light is reflected:

 

Solving for θB gives

 

For a glass medium (n2 ≈ 1.5) in air (n1 ≈ 1), Brewster's angle for visible light is approximately 56°, while for an air-water interface (n2 ≈ 1.33), it is approximately 53°. Since the refractive index for a given medium changes depending on the wavelength of light, Brewster's angle will also vary with wavelength.

The phenomenon of light being polarized by reflection from a surface at a particular angle was first observed by Étienne-Louis Malus in 1808.[3] He attempted to relate the polarizing angle to the refractive index of the material, but was frustrated by the inconsistent quality of glasses available at that time. In 1815, Brewster experimented with higher-quality materials and showed that this angle was a function of the refractive index, defining Brewster's law.

Brewster's angle is often referred to as the "polarizing angle", because light that reflects from a surface at this angle is entirely polarized perpendicular to the plane of incidence ("s-polarized"). A glass plate or a stack of plates placed at Brewster's angle in a light beam can, thus, be used as a polarizer. The concept of a polarizing angle can be extended to the concept of a Brewster wavenumber to cover planar interfaces between two linear bianisotropic materials. In the case of reflection at Brewster's angle, the reflected and refracted rays are mutually perpendicular.

For magnetic materials, Brewster's angle can exist for only one of the incident wave polarizations, as determined by the relative strengths of the dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability.[4] This has implications for the existence of generalized Brewster angles for dielectric metasurfaces.[5]

Applications edit

While at the Brewster angle there is no reflection of the p polarization, at yet greater angles the reflection coefficient of the p polarization is always less than that of the s polarization, almost up to 90° incidence where the reflectivity of each rises towards unity. Thus reflected light from horizontal surfaces (such as the surface of a road) at a distance much greater than one's height (so that the incidence angle of specularly reflected light is near, or usually well beyond the Brewster angle) is strongly s-polarized. Polarized sunglasses use a sheet of polarizing material to block horizontally-polarized light and thus reduce glare in such situations. These are most effective with smooth surfaces where specular reflection (thus from light whose angle of incidence is the same as the angle of reflection defined by the angle observed from) is dominant, but even diffuse reflections from roads for instance, are also significantly reduced.

Photographers also use polarizing filters to remove reflections from water so that they can photograph objects beneath the surface. Using a polarizing camera attachment which can be rotated, such a filter can be adjusted to reduce reflections from objects other than horizontal surfaces, such as seen in the accompanying photograph (right) where the s polarization (approximately vertical) has been eliminated using such a filter.

 
Photographs taken of a window with a camera polarizer filter rotated to two different angles. In the picture at left, the polarizer is aligned to pass only the vertical polarization which is strongly reflected from the window. In the picture at right, the polarizer has been rotated 90° to eliminate the heavily polarized reflected sunlight, passing only the p (horizontal in this case) polarization.

When recording a classical hologram, the bright reference beam is typically arranged to strike the film in the p polarization at Brewster's angle. By thus eliminating reflection of the reference beam at the transparent back surface of the holographic film, unwanted interference effects in the resulting hologram are avoided.

Entrance windows or prisms with their surfaces at the Brewster angle are commonly used in optics and laser physics in particular. The polarized laser light enters the prism at Brewster's angle without any reflective losses.

In surface science, Brewster angle microscopes are used to image layers of particles or molecules at air-liquid interfaces. Using illumination by a laser at Brewster's angle to the interface and observation at the angle of reflection, the uniform liquid does not reflect, appearing black in the image. However any molecular layers or artifacts at the surface, whose refractive index or physical structure contrasts with the liquid, allows for some reflection against that black background which is captured by a camera.

Brewster windows edit

 
A Brewster window

Gas lasers using an external cavity (reflection by one or both mirrors outside the gain medium) generally seal the tube using windows tilted at Brewster's angle. This prevents light in the intended polarization from being lost through reflection (and reducing the round-trip gain of the laser) which is critical in lasers having a low round-trip gain. On the other hand, it does remove s polarized light, increasing the round trip loss for that polarization, and ensuring the laser only oscillates in one linear polarization, as is usually desired. And many sealed-tube lasers (which do not even need windows) have a glass plate inserted within the tube at the Brewster angle, simply for the purpose of allowing lasing in only one polarization.[6]

Pseudo-Brewster's angle edit

When the reflecting surface is absorbing, reflectivity at parallel polarization (p) goes through a non-zero minimum at the so-called pseudo-Brewster's angle.[7][8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Brewster, David (1815). "On the laws which regulate the polarisation of light by reflexion from transparent bodies". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 105: 125–159. doi:10.1098/rstl.1815.0010.
  2. ^ Lakhtakia, Akhlesh (June 1989). "Would Brewster recognize today's Brewster angle?" (PDF). Optics News. 15 (6): 14–18. doi:10.1364/ON.15.6.000014.
  3. ^ See:
    • Malus (1809) "Sur une propriété de la lumière réfléchie" (On a property of reflected light), Mémoires de physique et de chimie de la Société d'Arcueil, 2 : 143–158.
    • Malus, E.L. (1809) "Sur une propriété de la lumière réfléchie par les corps diaphanes" (On a property of light reflected by translucent substances), Nouveau Bulletin des Sciences [par la Societé Philomatique de Paris], 1 : 266–270.
    • Etienne Louis Malus, Théorie de la double réfraction de la lumière dans les substances cristallisées [Theory of the double refraction of light in crystallized substances] (Paris, France: Garnery, 1810), Chapitre troisième. Des nouvelles propriétés physiques que la lumière acquiert par l'influence des corps qui la réfractent ou la réfléchissent. (Chapter 3. On new physical properties that light acquires by the influence of bodies that refract it or reflect it.), pp. 413–449.
  4. ^ Giles, C. L.; Wild, W. J. (1985). "Brewster angles for magnetic media" (PDF). International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves. 6 (3): 187–197. Bibcode:1985IJIMW...6..187G. doi:10.1007/BF01010357. S2CID 122287937. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  5. ^ Paniagua-Domínguez, Ramón; Feng Yu, Ye; Miroshnichenko, Andrey E.; Krivitsky, Leonid A.; Fu, Yuan Hsing; Valuckas, Vytautas; Gonzaga, Leonard; et al. (2016). "Generalized Brewster effect in dielectric metasurfaces". Nature Communications. 7: 10362. arXiv:1506.08267. Bibcode:2016NatCo...710362P. doi:10.1038/ncomms10362. PMC 4735648. PMID 26783075.
  6. ^ Optics, 3rd edition, Hecht, ISBN 0-201-30425-2
  7. ^ Azzam, Rasheed M A (14 September 1994). Goldstein, Dennis H; Chenault, David B (eds.). "Fresnel's interface reflection coefficients for the parallel and perpendicular polarizations: global properties and facts not found in your textbook". Proc. SPIE. Polarization Analysis and Measurement II. 2265: 120. Bibcode:1994SPIE.2265..120A. doi:10.1117/12.186660. S2CID 135659948.
  8. ^ Barclay, Les, ed. (2003). Propagation of Radiowaves. Electromagnetics and Radar. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). IET. p. 96. ISBN 9780852961025.

Further reading edit

  • Lakhtakia, A. (1992). "General schema for the Brewster conditions" (PDF). Optik. 90 (4): 184–186.

External links edit

  • Brewster's Angle Extraction from Wolfram Research
  • Brewster window at RP-photonics.com
  • TE, TM Reflection Coefficients – interactive phase and magnitude plots showing Brewster's angle

brewster, angle, also, known, polarization, angle, angle, incidence, which, light, with, particular, polarization, perfectly, transmitted, through, transparent, dielectric, surface, with, reflection, when, unpolarized, light, incident, this, angle, light, that. Brewster s angle also known as the polarization angle is an angle of incidence at which light with a particular polarization is perfectly transmitted through a transparent dielectric surface with no reflection When unpolarized light is incident at this angle the light that is reflected from the surface is therefore perfectly polarized The angle is named after the Scottish physicist Sir David Brewster 1781 1868 1 2 An illustration of the polarization of light that is incident on an interface at Brewster s angle Contents 1 Explanation 2 Applications 2 1 Brewster windows 3 Pseudo Brewster s angle 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksExplanation editWhen light encounters a boundary between two media with different refractive indices some of it is usually reflected as shown in the figure above The fraction that is reflected is described by the Fresnel equations and depends on the incoming light s polarization and angle of incidence The Fresnel equations predict that light with the p polarization electric field polarized in the same plane as the incident ray and the surface normal at the point of incidence will not be reflected if the angle of incidence is 8B arctan n2n1 displaystyle theta mathrm B arctan left frac n 2 n 1 right nbsp where n1 is the refractive index of the initial medium through which the light propagates the incident medium and n2 is the index of the other medium This equation is known as Brewster s law and the angle defined by it is Brewster s angle The physical mechanism for this can be qualitatively understood from the manner in which electric dipoles in the media respond to p polarized light One can imagine that light incident on the surface is absorbed and then re radiated by oscillating electric dipoles at the interface between the two media The polarization of freely propagating light is always perpendicular to the direction in which the light is travelling The dipoles that produce the transmitted refracted light oscillate in the polarization direction of that light These same oscillating dipoles also generate the reflected light However dipoles do not radiate any energy in the direction of the dipole moment If the refracted light is p polarized and propagates exactly perpendicular to the direction in which the light is predicted to be specularly reflected the dipoles point along the specular reflection direction and therefore no light can be reflected See diagram above With simple geometry this condition can be expressed as 81 82 90 displaystyle theta 1 theta 2 90 circ nbsp where 81 is the angle of reflection or incidence and 82 is the angle of refraction Using Snell s law n1sin 81 n2sin 82 displaystyle n 1 sin theta 1 n 2 sin theta 2 nbsp one can calculate the incident angle 81 8B at which no light is reflected n1sin 8B n2sin 90 8B n2cos 8B displaystyle n 1 sin theta mathrm B n 2 sin 90 circ theta mathrm B n 2 cos theta mathrm B nbsp Solving for 8B gives 8B arctan n2n1 displaystyle theta mathrm B arctan left frac n 2 n 1 right nbsp For a glass medium n2 1 5 in air n1 1 Brewster s angle for visible light is approximately 56 while for an air water interface n2 1 33 it is approximately 53 Since the refractive index for a given medium changes depending on the wavelength of light Brewster s angle will also vary with wavelength The phenomenon of light being polarized by reflection from a surface at a particular angle was first observed by Etienne Louis Malus in 1808 3 He attempted to relate the polarizing angle to the refractive index of the material but was frustrated by the inconsistent quality of glasses available at that time In 1815 Brewster experimented with higher quality materials and showed that this angle was a function of the refractive index defining Brewster s law Brewster s angle is often referred to as the polarizing angle because light that reflects from a surface at this angle is entirely polarized perpendicular to the plane of incidence s polarized A glass plate or a stack of plates placed at Brewster s angle in a light beam can thus be used as a polarizer The concept of a polarizing angle can be extended to the concept of a Brewster wavenumber to cover planar interfaces between two linear bianisotropic materials In the case of reflection at Brewster s angle the reflected and refracted rays are mutually perpendicular For magnetic materials Brewster s angle can exist for only one of the incident wave polarizations as determined by the relative strengths of the dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability 4 This has implications for the existence of generalized Brewster angles for dielectric metasurfaces 5 Applications editWhile at the Brewster angle there is no reflection of the p polarization at yet greater angles the reflection coefficient of the p polarization is always less than that of the s polarization almost up to 90 incidence where the reflectivity of each rises towards unity Thus reflected light from horizontal surfaces such as the surface of a road at a distance much greater than one s height so that the incidence angle of specularly reflected light is near or usually well beyond the Brewster angle is strongly s polarized Polarized sunglasses use a sheet of polarizing material to block horizontally polarized light and thus reduce glare in such situations These are most effective with smooth surfaces where specular reflection thus from light whose angle of incidence is the same as the angle of reflection defined by the angle observed from is dominant but even diffuse reflections from roads for instance are also significantly reduced Photographers also use polarizing filters to remove reflections from water so that they can photograph objects beneath the surface Using a polarizing camera attachment which can be rotated such a filter can be adjusted to reduce reflections from objects other than horizontal surfaces such as seen in the accompanying photograph right where the s polarization approximately vertical has been eliminated using such a filter nbsp Photographs taken of a window with a camera polarizer filter rotated to two different angles In the picture at left the polarizer is aligned to pass only the vertical polarization which is strongly reflected from the window In the picture at right the polarizer has been rotated 90 to eliminate the heavily polarized reflected sunlight passing only the p horizontal in this case polarization When recording a classical hologram the bright reference beam is typically arranged to strike the film in the p polarization at Brewster s angle By thus eliminating reflection of the reference beam at the transparent back surface of the holographic film unwanted interference effects in the resulting hologram are avoided Entrance windows or prisms with their surfaces at the Brewster angle are commonly used in optics and laser physics in particular The polarized laser light enters the prism at Brewster s angle without any reflective losses In surface science Brewster angle microscopes are used to image layers of particles or molecules at air liquid interfaces Using illumination by a laser at Brewster s angle to the interface and observation at the angle of reflection the uniform liquid does not reflect appearing black in the image However any molecular layers or artifacts at the surface whose refractive index or physical structure contrasts with the liquid allows for some reflection against that black background which is captured by a camera Brewster windows edit nbsp A Brewster windowGas lasers using an external cavity reflection by one or both mirrors outside the gain medium generally seal the tube using windows tilted at Brewster s angle This prevents light in the intended polarization from being lost through reflection and reducing the round trip gain of the laser which is critical in lasers having a low round trip gain On the other hand it does remove s polarized light increasing the round trip loss for that polarization and ensuring the laser only oscillates in one linear polarization as is usually desired And many sealed tube lasers which do not even need windows have a glass plate inserted within the tube at the Brewster angle simply for the purpose of allowing lasing in only one polarization 6 Pseudo Brewster s angle editWhen the reflecting surface is absorbing reflectivity at parallel polarization p goes through a non zero minimum at the so called pseudo Brewster s angle 7 8 See also editBrewster angle microscope Critical angle the angle of total internal reflection References edit Brewster David 1815 On the laws which regulate the polarisation of light by reflexion from transparent bodies Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 105 125 159 doi 10 1098 rstl 1815 0010 Lakhtakia Akhlesh June 1989 Would Brewster recognize today s Brewster angle PDF Optics News 15 6 14 18 doi 10 1364 ON 15 6 000014 See Malus 1809 Sur une propriete de la lumiere reflechie On a property of reflected light Memoires de physique et de chimie de la Societe d Arcueil 2 143 158 Malus E L 1809 Sur une propriete de la lumiere reflechie par les corps diaphanes On a property of light reflected by translucent substances Nouveau Bulletin des Sciences par la Societe Philomatique de Paris 1 266 270 Etienne Louis Malus Theorie de la double refraction de la lumiere dans les substances cristallisees Theory of the double refraction of light in crystallized substances Paris France Garnery 1810 Chapitre troisieme Des nouvelles proprietes physiques que la lumiere acquiert par l influence des corps qui la refractent ou la reflechissent Chapter 3 On new physical properties that light acquires by the influence of bodies that refract it or reflect it pp 413 449 Giles C L Wild W J 1985 Brewster angles for magnetic media PDF International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves 6 3 187 197 Bibcode 1985IJIMW 6 187G doi 10 1007 BF01010357 S2CID 122287937 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Paniagua Dominguez Ramon Feng Yu Ye Miroshnichenko Andrey E Krivitsky Leonid A Fu Yuan Hsing Valuckas Vytautas Gonzaga Leonard et al 2016 Generalized Brewster effect in dielectric metasurfaces Nature Communications 7 10362 arXiv 1506 08267 Bibcode 2016NatCo 710362P doi 10 1038 ncomms10362 PMC 4735648 PMID 26783075 Optics 3rd edition Hecht ISBN 0 201 30425 2 Azzam Rasheed M A 14 September 1994 Goldstein Dennis H Chenault David B eds Fresnel s interface reflection coefficients for the parallel and perpendicular polarizations global properties and facts not found in your textbook Proc SPIE Polarization Analysis and Measurement II 2265 120 Bibcode 1994SPIE 2265 120A doi 10 1117 12 186660 S2CID 135659948 Barclay Les ed 2003 Propagation of Radiowaves Electromagnetics and Radar Vol 2 2nd ed IET p 96 ISBN 9780852961025 Further reading editLakhtakia A 1992 General schema for the Brewster conditions PDF Optik 90 4 184 186 External links editBrewster s Angle Extraction from Wolfram Research Brewster window at RP photonics com TE TM Reflection Coefficients interactive phase and magnitude plots showing Brewster s angle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brewster 27s angle amp oldid 1210047122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.