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Fresnel equations

The Fresnel equations (or Fresnel coefficients) describe the reflection and transmission of light (or electromagnetic radiation in general) when incident on an interface between different optical media. They were deduced by French engineer and physicist Augustin-Jean Fresnel (/frˈnɛl/) who was the first to understand that light is a transverse wave, when no one realized that the waves were electric and magnetic fields. For the first time, polarization could be understood quantitatively, as Fresnel's equations correctly predicted the differing behaviour of waves of the s and p polarizations incident upon a material interface.

Partial transmission and reflection of a pulse travelling from a low to a high refractive index medium.
At near-grazing incidence, media interfaces appear mirror-like especially due to reflection of the s polarization, despite being poor reflectors at normal incidence. Polarized sunglasses block the s polarization, greatly reducing glare from horizontal surfaces.

Overview edit

When light strikes the interface between a medium with refractive index n1 and a second medium with refractive index n2, both reflection and refraction of the light may occur. The Fresnel equations give the ratio of the reflected wave's electric field to the incident wave's electric field, and the ratio of the transmitted wave's electric field to the incident wave's electric field, for each of two components of polarization. (The magnetic fields can also be related using similar coefficients.) These ratios are generally complex, describing not only the relative amplitudes but also the phase shifts at the interface.

The equations assume the interface between the media is flat and that the media are homogeneous and isotropic.[1] The incident light is assumed to be a plane wave, which is sufficient to solve any problem since any incident light field can be decomposed into plane waves and polarizations.

S and P polarizations edit

 
The plane of incidence is defined by the incoming radiation's propagation vector and the normal vector of the surface.

There are two sets of Fresnel coefficients for two different linear polarization components of the incident wave. Since any polarization state can be resolved into a combination of two orthogonal linear polarizations, this is sufficient for any problem. Likewise, unpolarized (or "randomly polarized") light has an equal amount of power in each of two linear polarizations.

The s polarization refers to polarization of a wave's electric field normal to the plane of incidence (the z direction in the derivation below); then the magnetic field is in the plane of incidence. The p polarization refers to polarization of the electric field in the plane of incidence (the xy plane in the derivation below); then the magnetic field is normal to the plane of incidence.

Although the reflection and transmission are dependent on polarization, at normal incidence (θ = 0) there is no distinction between them so all polarization states are governed by a single set of Fresnel coefficients (and another special case is mentioned below in which that is true).

Configuration edit

 
Variables used in the Fresnel equations

In the diagram on the right, an incident plane wave in the direction of the ray IO strikes the interface between two media of refractive indices n1 and n2 at point O. Part of the wave is reflected in the direction OR, and part refracted in the direction OT. The angles that the incident, reflected and refracted rays make to the normal of the interface are given as θi, θr and θt, respectively. The relationship between these angles is given by the law of reflection:

 
and Snell's law:
 

The behavior of light striking the interface is explained by considering the electric and magnetic fields that constitute an electromagnetic wave, and the laws of electromagnetism, as shown below. The ratio of waves' electric field (or magnetic field) amplitudes are obtained, but in practice one is more often interested in formulae which determine power coefficients, since power (or irradiance) is what can be directly measured at optical frequencies. The power of a wave is generally proportional to the square of the electric (or magnetic) field amplitude.

Power (intensity) reflection and transmission coefficients edit

 
Power coefficients: air to glass
 
Power coefficients: glass to air (Total internal reflection starts from 42° making reflection coefficient 1)

We call the fraction of the incident power that is reflected from the interface the reflectance (or reflectivity, or power reflection coefficient) R, and the fraction that is refracted into the second medium is called the transmittance (or transmissivity, or power transmission coefficient) T. Note that these are what would be measured right at each side of an interface and do not account for attenuation of a wave in an absorbing medium following transmission or reflection.[2]

The reflectance for s-polarized light is

 

while the reflectance for p-polarized light is

 

where Z1 and Z2 are the wave impedances of media 1 and 2, respectively.

We assume that the media are non-magnetic (i.e., μ1 = μ2 = μ0), which is typically a good approximation at optical frequencies (and for transparent media at other frequencies).[3] Then the wave impedances are determined solely by the refractive indices n1 and n2:

 
where Z0 is the impedance of free space and i = 1, 2. Making this substitution, we obtain equations using the refractive indices:
 
 

The second form of each equation is derived from the first by eliminating θt using Snell's law and trigonometric identities.

As a consequence of conservation of energy, one can find the transmitted power (or more correctly, irradiance: power per unit area) simply as the portion of the incident power that isn't reflected: [4]

 

and

 

Note that all such intensities are measured in terms of a wave's irradiance in the direction normal to the interface; this is also what is measured in typical experiments. That number could be obtained from irradiances in the direction of an incident or reflected wave (given by the magnitude of a wave's Poynting vector) multiplied by cos θ for a wave at an angle θ to the normal direction (or equivalently, taking the dot product of the Poynting vector with the unit vector normal to the interface). This complication can be ignored in the case of the reflection coefficient, since cos θi = cos θr, so that the ratio of reflected to incident irradiance in the wave's direction is the same as in the direction normal to the interface.

Although these relationships describe the basic physics, in many practical applications one is concerned with "natural light" that can be described as unpolarized. That means that there is an equal amount of power in the s and p polarizations, so that the effective reflectivity of the material is just the average of the two reflectivities:

 

For low-precision applications involving unpolarized light, such as computer graphics, rather than rigorously computing the effective reflection coefficient for each angle, Schlick's approximation is often used.

Special cases edit

Normal incidence edit

For the case of normal incidence,  , and there is no distinction between s and p polarization. Thus, the reflectance simplifies to

 

For common glass (n2 ≈ 1.5) surrounded by air (n1 = 1), the power reflectance at normal incidence can be seen to be about 4%, or 8% accounting for both sides of a glass pane.

Brewster's angle edit

At a dielectric interface from n1 to n2, there is a particular angle of incidence at which Rp goes to zero and a p-polarised incident wave is purely refracted, thus all reflected light is s-polarised. This angle is known as Brewster's angle, and is around 56° for n1 = 1 and n2 = 1.5 (typical glass).

Total internal reflection edit

When light travelling in a denser medium strikes the surface of a less dense medium (i.e., n1 > n2), beyond a particular incidence angle known as the critical angle, all light is reflected and Rs = Rp = 1. This phenomenon, known as total internal reflection, occurs at incidence angles for which Snell's law predicts that the sine of the angle of refraction would exceed unity (whereas in fact sin θ ≤ 1 for all real θ). For glass with n = 1.5 surrounded by air, the critical angle is approximately 42°.

45° Incidence edit

Reflection at 45° incidence is very commonly used for making 90° turns. For the case of light traversing from a less dense medium into a denser one at 45° incidence (θ = 45°), it follows algebraically from the above equations that Rp equals the square of Rs:

 

This can be used to either verify the consistency of the measurements of Rs and Rp, or to derive one of them when the other is known. This relationship is only valid for the simple case of a single plane interface between two homogeneous materials, not for films on substrates, where a more complex analysis is required.

Measurements of Rs and Rp at 45° can be used to estimate the reflectivity at normal incidence.[citation needed] The "average of averages" obtained by calculating first the arithmetic as well as the geometric average of Rs and Rp, and then averaging these two averages again arithmetically, gives a value for R0 with an error of less than about 3% for most common optical materials.[citation needed] This is useful because measurements at normal incidence can be difficult to achieve in an experimental setup since the incoming beam and the detector will obstruct each other. However, since the dependence of Rs and Rp on the angle of incidence for angles below 10° is very small, a measurement at about 5° will usually be a good approximation for normal incidence, while allowing for a separation of the incoming and reflected beam.

Complex amplitude reflection and transmission coefficients edit

The above equations relating powers (which could be measured with a photometer for instance) are derived from the Fresnel equations which solve the physical problem in terms of electromagnetic field complex amplitudes, i.e., considering phase shifts in addition to their amplitudes. Those underlying equations supply generally complex-valued ratios of those EM fields and may take several different forms, depending on the formalism used. The complex amplitude coefficients for reflection and transmission are usually represented by lower case r and t (whereas the power coefficients are capitalized). As before, we are assuming the magnetic permeability, µ of both media to be equal to the permeability of free space µo as is essentially true of all dielectrics at optical frequencies.

 
Amplitude coefficients: air to glass
 
Amplitude coefficients: glass to air

In the following equations and graphs, we adopt the following conventions. For s polarization, the reflection coefficient r is defined as the ratio of the reflected wave's complex electric field amplitude to that of the incident wave, whereas for p polarization r is the ratio of the waves complex magnetic field amplitudes (or equivalently, the negative of the ratio of their electric field amplitudes). The transmission coefficient t is the ratio of the transmitted wave's complex electric field amplitude to that of the incident wave, for either polarization. The coefficients r and t are generally different between the s and p polarizations, and even at normal incidence (where the designations s and p do not even apply!) the sign of r is reversed depending on whether the wave is considered to be s or p polarized, an artifact of the adopted sign convention (see graph for an air-glass interface at 0° incidence).

The equations consider a plane wave incident on a plane interface at angle of incidence  , a wave reflected at angle  , and a wave transmitted at angle  . In the case of an interface into an absorbing material (where n is complex) or total internal reflection, the angle of transmission does not generally evaluate to a real number. In that case, however, meaningful results can be obtained using formulations of these relationships in which trigonometric functions and geometric angles are avoided; the inhomogeneous waves launched into the second medium cannot be described using a single propagation angle.

Using this convention,[5][6]

 

One can see that ts = rs + 1[7] and n2/n1tp=rp+1. One can write very similar equations applying to the ratio of the waves' magnetic fields, but comparison of the electric fields is more conventional.

Because the reflected and incident waves propagate in the same medium and make the same angle with the normal to the surface, the power reflection coefficient R is just the squared magnitude of r: [8]

 

On the other hand, calculation of the power transmission coefficient T is less straightforward, since the light travels in different directions in the two media. What's more, the wave impedances in the two media differ; power (irradiance) is given by the square of the electric field amplitude divided by the characteristic impedance of the medium (or by the square of the magnetic field multiplied by the characteristic impedance). This results in:[9]

 

using the above definition of t. The introduced factor of n2/n1 is the reciprocal of the ratio of the media's wave impedances. The cos(θ) factors adjust the waves' powers so they are reckoned in the direction normal to the interface, for both the incident and transmitted waves, so that full power transmission corresponds to T=1.

In the case of total internal reflection where the power transmission T is zero, t nevertheless describes the electric field (including its phase) just beyond the interface. This is an evanescent field which does not propagate as a wave (thus T = 0) but has nonzero values very close to the interface. The phase shift of the reflected wave on total internal reflection can similarly be obtained from the phase angles of rp and rs (whose magnitudes are unity in this case). These phase shifts are different for s and p waves, which is the well-known principle by which total internal reflection is used to effect polarization transformations.

Alternative forms edit

In the above formula for rs, if we put   (Snell's law) and multiply the numerator and denominator by 1/n1sinθt, we obtain [10][11]

 

If we do likewise with the formula for rp, the result is easily shown to be equivalent to [12][13]

 

These formulas [14][15][16] are known respectively as Fresnel's sine law and Fresnel's tangent law.[17] Although at normal incidence these expressions reduce to 0/0, one can see that they yield the correct results in the limit as θi → 0.

Multiple surfaces edit

When light makes multiple reflections between two or more parallel surfaces, the multiple beams of light generally interfere with one another, resulting in net transmission and reflection amplitudes that depend on the light's wavelength. The interference, however, is seen only when the surfaces are at distances comparable to or smaller than the light's coherence length, which for ordinary white light is few micrometers; it can be much larger for light from a laser.

An example of interference between reflections is the iridescent colours seen in a soap bubble or in thin oil films on water. Applications include Fabry–Pérot interferometers, antireflection coatings, and optical filters. A quantitative analysis of these effects is based on the Fresnel equations, but with additional calculations to account for interference.

The transfer-matrix method, or the recursive Rouard method [18] can be used to solve multiple-surface problems.

History edit

In 1808, Étienne-Louis Malus discovered that when a ray of light was reflected off a non-metallic surface at the appropriate angle, it behaved like one of the two rays emerging from a doubly-refractive calcite crystal.[19] He later coined the term polarization to describe this behavior.  In 1815, the dependence of the polarizing angle on the refractive index was determined experimentally by David Brewster.[20] But the reason for that dependence was such a deep mystery that in late 1817, Thomas Young was moved to write:

[T]he great difficulty of all, which is to assign a sufficient reason for the reflection or nonreflection of a polarised ray, will probably long remain, to mortify the vanity of an ambitious philosophy, completely unresolved by any theory.[21]

In 1821, however, Augustin-Jean Fresnel derived results equivalent to his sine and tangent laws (above), by modeling light waves as transverse elastic waves with vibrations perpendicular to what had previously been called the plane of polarization. Fresnel promptly confirmed by experiment that the equations correctly predicted the direction of polarization of the reflected beam when the incident beam was polarized at 45° to the plane of incidence, for light incident from air onto glass or water; in particular, the equations gave the correct polarization at Brewster's angle.[22] The experimental confirmation was reported in a "postscript" to the work in which Fresnel first revealed his theory that light waves, including "unpolarized" waves, were purely transverse.[23]

Details of Fresnel's derivation, including the modern forms of the sine law and tangent law, were given later, in a memoir read to the French Academy of Sciences in January 1823.[24] That derivation combined conservation of energy with continuity of the tangential vibration at the interface, but failed to allow for any condition on the normal component of vibration.[25] The first derivation from electromagnetic principles was given by Hendrik Lorentz in 1875.[26]

In the same memoir of January 1823,[24] Fresnel found that for angles of incidence greater than the critical angle, his formulas for the reflection coefficients (rs and rp) gave complex values with unit magnitudes. Noting that the magnitude, as usual, represented the ratio of peak amplitudes, he guessed that the argument represented the phase shift, and verified the hypothesis experimentally.[27] The verification involved

  • calculating the angle of incidence that would introduce a total phase difference of 90° between the s and p components, for various numbers of total internal reflections at that angle (generally there were two solutions),
  • subjecting light to that number of total internal reflections at that angle of incidence, with an initial linear polarization at 45° to the plane of incidence, and
  • checking that the final polarization was circular.[28]

Thus he finally had a quantitative theory for what we now call the Fresnel rhomb — a device that he had been using in experiments, in one form or another, since 1817 (see Fresnel rhomb  §History).

The success of the complex reflection coefficient inspired James MacCullagh and Augustin-Louis Cauchy, beginning in 1836, to analyze reflection from metals by using the Fresnel equations with a complex refractive index.[29]

Four weeks before he presented his completed theory of total internal reflection and the rhomb, Fresnel submitted a memoir [30] in which he introduced the needed terms linear polarization, circular polarization, and elliptical polarization,[31] and in which he explained optical rotation as a species of birefringence: linearly-polarized light can be resolved into two circularly-polarized components rotating in opposite directions, and if these propagate at different speeds, the phase difference between them — hence the orientation of their linearly-polarized resultant — will vary continuously with distance.[32]

Thus Fresnel's interpretation of the complex values of his reflection coefficients marked the confluence of several streams of his research and, arguably, the essential completion of his reconstruction of physical optics on the transverse-wave hypothesis (see Augustin-Jean Fresnel).

Derivation edit

Here we systematically derive the above relations from electromagnetic premises.

Material parameters edit

In order to compute meaningful Fresnel coefficients, we must assume that the medium is (approximately) linear and homogeneous. If the medium is also isotropic, the four field vectors E, B, D, H are related by

 

where ϵ and μ are scalars, known respectively as the (electric) permittivity and the (magnetic) permeability of the medium. For a vacuum, these have the values ϵ0 and μ0, respectively. Hence we define the relative permittivity (or dielectric constant) ϵrel = ϵ/ϵ0 , and the relative permeability μrel = μ/μ0.

In optics it is common to assume that the medium is non-magnetic, so that μrel = 1. For ferromagnetic materials at radio/microwave frequencies, larger values of μrel must be taken into account. But, for optically transparent media, and for all other materials at optical frequencies (except possible metamaterials), μrel is indeed very close to 1; that is, μ ≈ μ0.

In optics, one usually knows the refractive index n of the medium, which is the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum (c) to the speed of light in the medium. In the analysis of partial reflection and transmission, one is also interested in the electromagnetic wave impedance Z, which is the ratio of the amplitude of E to the amplitude of H. It is therefore desirable to express n and Z in terms of ϵ and μ, and thence to relate Z to n. The last-mentioned relation, however, will make it convenient to derive the reflection coefficients in terms of the wave admittance Y, which is the reciprocal of the wave impedance Z.

In the case of uniform plane sinusoidal waves, the wave impedance or admittance is known as the intrinsic impedance or admittance of the medium. This case is the one for which the Fresnel coefficients are to be derived.

Electromagnetic plane waves edit

In a uniform plane sinusoidal electromagnetic wave, the electric field E has the form

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where Ek is the (constant) complex amplitude vector,  i is the imaginary unitk is the wave vector (whose magnitude k is the angular wavenumber),  r is the position vectorω is the angular frequencyt is time, and it is understood that the real part of the expression is the physical field.[Note 1]  The value of the expression is unchanged if the position r varies in a direction normal to k; hence k is normal to the wavefronts.

To advance the phase by the angle ϕ, we replace ωt by ωt+ϕ (that is, we replace −ωt by −ωt−ϕ), with the result that the (complex) field is multiplied by e−iϕ. So a phase advance is equivalent to multiplication by a complex constant with a negative argument. This becomes more obvious when the field (1) is factored as Ekeik⋅re−iωt, where the last factor contains the time-dependence. That factor also implies that differentiation w.r.t. time corresponds to multiplication by −iω. [Note 2]

If is the component of r in the direction of k, the field (1) can be written Ekei(kℓ−ωt).  If the argument of ei(⋯) is to be constant,   must increase at the velocity   known as the phase velocity(vp). This in turn is equal to  . Solving for k gives

 

 

 

 

 

(2)

As usual, we drop the time-dependent factor e−iωt which is understood to multiply every complex field quantity. The electric field for a uniform plane sine wave will then be represented by the location-dependent phasor

 

 

 

 

 

(3)

For fields of that form, Faraday's law and the Maxwell-Ampère law respectively reduce to [33]

 

Putting B=μH and D=ϵE, as above, we can eliminate B and D to obtain equations in only E and H:

 
If the material parameters ϵ and μ are real (as in a lossless dielectric), these equations show that k ,E ,H form a right-handed orthogonal triad, so that the same equations apply to the magnitudes of the respective vectors. Taking the magnitude equations and substituting from (2), we obtain
 
where H and E are the magnitudes of H and E. Multiplying the last two equations gives
 

 

 

 

 

(4)

Dividing (or cross-multiplying) the same two equations gives H=YE, where

 

 

 

 

 

(5)

This is the intrinsic admittance.

From (4) we obtain the phase velocity  . For a vacuum this reduces to  . Dividing the second result by the first gives

 
For a non-magnetic medium (the usual case), this becomes  .

(Taking the reciprocal of (5), we find that the intrinsic impedance is  . In a vacuum this takes the value   known as the impedance of free space. By division,  . For a non-magnetic medium, this becomes  )

The wave vectors edit

 
Incident, reflected, and transmitted wave vectors (ki, kr, and kt), for incidence from a medium with refractive index n1 to a medium with refractive index n2. The red arrows are perpendicular to the wave vectors.

In Cartesian coordinates (x, y,z), let the region y<0 have refractive index n1 , intrinsic admittance Y1 , etc., and let the region y>0 have refractive index n2 , intrinsic admittance Y2 , etc. Then the xz plane is the interface, and the y axis is normal to the interface (see diagram). Let i and j (in bold roman type) be the unit vectors in the x and y directions, respectively. Let the plane of incidence be the xy plane (the plane of the page), with the angle of incidence θi measured from j towards i. Let the angle of refraction, measured in the same sense, be θt, where the subscript t stands for transmitted (reserving r for reflected).

In the absence of Doppler shifts, ω does not change on reflection or refraction. Hence, by (2), the magnitude of the wave vector is proportional to the refractive index.

So, for a given ω, if we redefine k as the magnitude of the wave vector in the reference medium (for which n=1), then the wave vector has magnitude n1k in the first medium (region y<0 in the diagram) and magnitude n2k in the second medium. From the magnitudes and the geometry, we find that the wave vectors are

 
where the last step uses Snell's law. The corresponding dot products in the phasor form (3) are
 

 

 

 

 

(6)

Hence:

At   

 

 

 

 

(7)

The s components edit

For the s polarization, the E field is parallel to the z axis and may therefore be described by its component in the z direction. Let the reflection and transmission coefficients be rs and ts , respectively. Then, if the incident E field is taken to have unit amplitude, the phasor form (3) of its z component is

 

 

 

 

 

(8)

and the reflected and transmitted fields, in the same form, are

 

 

 

 

 

(9)

Under the sign convention used in this article, a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one that preserves the direction of the transverse field, meaning (in this context) the field normal to the plane of incidence. For the s polarization, that means the E field. If the incident, reflected, and transmitted E fields (in the above equations) are in the z direction ("out of the page"), then the respective H fields are in the directions of the red arrows, since k ,E ,H form a right-handed orthogonal triad. The H fields may therefore be described by their components in the directions of those arrows, denoted by Hi ,Hr,Ht.  Then, since H=YE,

 

 

 

 

 

(10)

At the interface, by the usual interface conditions for electromagnetic fields, the tangential components of the E and H fields must be continuous; that is,

 

 

 

 

 

(11)

When we substitute from equations (8) to (10) and then from (7), the exponential factors cancel out, so that the interface conditions reduce to the simultaneous equations

 

 

 

 

 

(12)

which are easily solved for rs and ts, yielding

 

 

 

 

 

(13)

and

 

 

 

 

 

(14)

At normal incidence (θi= θt= 0), indicated by an additional subscript 0, these results become

 

 

 

 

 

(15)

and

 

 

 

 

 

(16)

At grazing incidence (θi→ 90°), we have cosθi→ 0, hence rs−1 and ts→ 0.

The p components edit

For the p polarization, the incident, reflected, and transmitted E fields are parallel to the red arrows and may therefore be described by their components in the directions of those arrows. Let those components be Ei ,Er,Et (redefining the symbols for the new context). Let the reflection and transmission coefficients be rp and tp. Then, if the incident E field is taken to have unit amplitude, we have

 

 

 

 

 

(17)

If the E fields are in the directions of the red arrows, then, in order for k ,E ,H to form a right-handed orthogonal triad, the respective H fields must be in the −z direction ("into the page") and may therefore be described by their components in that direction. This is consistent with the adopted sign convention, namely that a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one that preserves the direction of the transverse field (the H field in the case of the p polarization). The agreement of the other field with the red arrows reveals an alternative definition of the sign convention: that a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one for which the field vector in the plane of incidence points towards the same medium before and after reflection or transmission.[34]

So, for the incident, reflected, and transmitted H fields, let the respective components in the −z direction be Hi ,Hr,Ht.  Then, since H=YE,

 

 

 

 

 

(18)

At the interface, the tangential components of the E and H fields must be continuous; that is,

 

 

 

 

 

(19)

When we substitute from equations (17) and (18) and then from (7), the exponential factors again cancel out, so that the interface conditions reduce to

 

 

 

 

 

(20)

Solving for rp and tp, we find

 

 

 

 

 

(21)

and

 

 

 

 

 

(22)

At normal incidence (θi= θt= 0), indicated by an additional subscript 0, these results become

 

 

 

 

 

(23)

and

 

 

 

 

 

(24)

At grazing incidence (θi→ 90°), we again have cosθi→ 0, hence rp−1 and tp→ 0.

Comparing (23) and (24) with (15) and (16), we see that at normal incidence, under the adopted sign convention, the transmission coefficients for the two polarizations are equal, whereas the reflection coefficients have equal magnitudes but opposite signs. While this clash of signs is a disadvantage of the convention, the attendant advantage is that the signs agree at grazing incidence.

Power ratios (reflectivity and transmissivity) edit

The Poynting vector for a wave is a vector whose component in any direction is the irradiance (power per unit area) of that wave on a surface perpendicular to that direction. For a plane sinusoidal wave the Poynting vector is 1/2Re{E×H}, where E and H are due only to the wave in question, and the asterisk denotes complex conjugation. Inside a lossless dielectric (the usual case), E and H are in phase, and at right angles to each other and to the wave vector k ; so, for s polarization, using the z and xy components of E and H respectively (or for p polarization, using the xy and -z components of E and H), the irradiance in the direction of k is given simply by EH/2 , which is E2/2Z in a medium of intrinsic impedance Z = 1/Y. To compute the irradiance in the direction normal to the interface, as we shall require in the definition of the power transmission coefficient, we could use only the x component (rather than the full xy component) of H or E or, equivalently, simply multiply EH/2 by the proper geometric factor, obtaining (E2/2Z) cos θ.

From equations (13) and (21), taking squared magnitudes, we find that the reflectivity (ratio of reflected power to incident power) is

 

 

 

 

 

(25)

for the s polarization, and

 

 

 

 

 

(26)

for the p polarization. Note that when comparing the powers of two such waves in the same medium and with the same cosθ, the impedance and geometric factors mentioned above are identical and cancel out. But in computing the power transmission (below), these factors must be taken into account.

The simplest way to obtain the power transmission coefficient (transmissivity, the ratio of transmitted power to incident power in the direction normal to the interface, i.e. the y direction) is to use R + T = 1 (conservation of energy). In this way we find

 

 

 

 

 

(25T)

for the s polarization, and

 

 

 

 

 

(26T)

for the p polarization.

In the case of an interface between two lossless media (for which ϵ and μ are real and positive), one can obtain these results directly using the squared magnitudes of the amplitude transmission coefficients that we found earlier in equations (14) and (22). But, for given amplitude (as noted above), the component of the Poynting vector in the y direction is proportional to the geometric factor cos θ and inversely proportional to the wave impedance Z. Applying these corrections to each wave, we obtain two ratios multiplying the square of the amplitude transmission coefficient:

 

 

 

 

 

(27)

for the s polarization, and

 

 

 

 

 

(28)

for the p polarization. The last two equations apply only to lossless dielectrics, and only at incidence angles smaller than the critical angle (beyond which, of course, T = 0 ).

For unpolarized light:

 

 

Where  .

Equal refractive indices edit

From equations (4) and (5), we see that two dissimilar media will have the same refractive index, but different admittances, if the ratio of their permeabilities is the inverse of the ratio of their permittivities. In that unusual situation we have θt= θi (that is, the transmitted ray is undeviated), so that the cosines in equations (13), (14), (21), (22), and (25) to (28) cancel out, and all the reflection and transmission ratios become independent of the angle of incidence; in other words, the ratios for normal incidence become applicable to all angles of incidence.[35] When extended to spherical reflection or scattering, this results in the Kerker effect for Mie scattering.

Non-magnetic media edit

Since the Fresnel equations were developed for optics, they are usually given for non-magnetic materials. Dividing (4) by (5)) yields

 
For non-magnetic media we can substitute the vacuum permeability μ0 for μ, so that
 
that is, the admittances are simply proportional to the corresponding refractive indices. When we make these substitutions in equations (13) to (16) and equations (21) to (26), the factor 0 cancels out. For the amplitude coefficients we obtain:[5][6]
 

 

 

 

 

(29)

 

 

 

 

 

(30)

 

 

 

 

 

(31)

 

 

 

 

 

(32)

For the case of normal incidence these reduce to:

 

 

 

 

 

(33)

 

 

 

 

 

(34)

 

 

 

 

 

(35)

 

 

 

 

 

(36)

The power reflection coefficients become:

 

 

 

 

 

(37)

 

 

 

 

 

(38)

The power transmissions can then be found from T = 1 − R.

Brewster's angle edit

For equal permeabilities (e.g., non-magnetic media), if θi and θt are complementary, we can substitute sinθt for cosθi, and sinθi for cosθt, so that the numerator in equation (31) becomes n2sinθtn1sinθi, which is zero (by Snell's law). Hence rp= 0 and only the s-polarized component is reflected. This is what happens at the Brewster angle. Substituting cosθi for sinθt in Snell's law, we readily obtain

 

 

 

 

 

(39)

for Brewster's angle.

Equal permittivities edit

Although it is not encountered in practice, the equations can also apply to the case of two media with a common permittivity but different refractive indices due to different permeabilities. From equations (4) and (5), if ϵ is fixed instead of μ, then Y becomes inversely proportional to n, with the result that the subscripts 1 and 2 in equations (29) to (38) are interchanged (due to the additional step of multiplying the numerator and denominator by n1n2). Hence, in (29) and (31), the expressions for rs and rp in terms of refractive indices will be interchanged, so that Brewster's angle (39) will give rs= 0 instead of rp= 0, and any beam reflected at that angle will be p-polarized instead of s-polarized.[36] Similarly, Fresnel's sine law will apply to the p polarization instead of the s polarization, and his tangent law to the s polarization instead of the p polarization.

This switch of polarizations has an analog in the old mechanical theory of light waves (see § History, above). One could predict reflection coefficients that agreed with observation by supposing (like Fresnel) that different refractive indices were due to different densities and that the vibrations were normal to what was then called the plane of polarization, or by supposing (like MacCullagh and Neumann) that different refractive indices were due to different elasticities and that the vibrations were parallel to that plane.[37] Thus the condition of equal permittivities and unequal permeabilities, although not realistic, is of some historical interest.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The above form (1) is typically used by physicists. Electrical engineers typically prefer the form  Ekej(ωtk⋅r); that is, they not only use j instead of i for the imaginary unit, but also change the sign of the exponent, with the result that the whole expression is replaced by its complex conjugate, leaving the real part unchanged [Cf. (e.g.) Collin, 1966, p. 41, eq.(2.81)]. The electrical engineers' form and the formulas derived therefrom may be converted to the physicists' convention by substituting −i for j.
  2. ^ In the electrical engineering convention, the time-dependent factor is ejωt, so that a phase advance corresponds to multiplication by a complex constant with a positive argument, and differentiation w.r.t. time corresponds to multiplication by +jω. This article, however, uses the physics convention, whose time-dependent factor is e−iωt. Although the imaginary unit does not appear explicitly in the results given here, the time-dependent factor affects the interpretation of any results that turn out to be complex.

References edit

  1. ^ Born & Wolf, 1970, p. 38.
  2. ^ Hecht, 1987, p. 100.
  3. ^ Driggers, Ronald G.; Hoffman, Craig; Driggers, Ronald (2011). Encyclopedia of Optical Engineering. doi:10.1081/E-EOE. ISBN 978-0-8247-0940-2.
  4. ^ Hecht, 1987, p. 102.
  5. ^ a b Lecture notes by Bo Sernelius, main site 2012-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, see especially Lecture 12 .
  6. ^ a b Born & Wolf, 1970, p. 40, eqs.(20), (21).
  7. ^ Hecht, 2002, p. 116, eqs.(4.49), (4.50).
  8. ^ Hecht, 2002, p. 120, eq. (4.56).
  9. ^ Hecht, 2002, p. 120, eq. (4.57).
  10. ^ Fresnel, 1866, p. 773.
  11. ^ Hecht, 2002, p. 115, eq. (4.42).
  12. ^ Fresnel, 1866, p. 757.
  13. ^ Hecht, 2002, p. 115, eq. (4.43).
  14. ^ E. Verdet, in Fresnel, 1866, p. 789n.
  15. ^ Born & Wolf, 1970, p. 40, eqs. (21a).
  16. ^ Jenkins & White, 1976, p. 524, eqs. (25a).
  17. ^ Whittaker, 1910, p. 134; Darrigol, 2012, p.213.
  18. ^ Heavens, O. S. (1955). Optical Properties of Thin Films. Academic Press. chapt. 4.
  19. ^ Darrigol, 2012, pp.191–2.
  20. ^ D. Brewster, "On the laws which regulate the polarisation of light by reflexion from transparent bodies", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, vol.105, pp.125–59, read 16 March 1815.
  21. ^ T. Young, "Chromatics" (written Sep.– Oct.1817), Supplement to the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica, vol.3 (first half, issued February 1818), pp.141–63, concluding sentence.
  22. ^ Buchwald, 1989, pp.390–91; Fresnel, 1866, pp.646–8.
  23. ^ A. Fresnel, "Note sur le calcul des teintes que la polarisation développe dans les lames cristallisées" et seq., Annales de Chimie et de Physique, vol. 17, pp. 102–11 (May 1821), 167–96 (June 1821), 312–15 ("Postscript", July 1821); reprinted in Fresnel, 1866, pp. 609–48; translated as "On the calculation of the tints that polarization develops in crystalline plates, & postscript", Zenodo4058004 / doi:10.5281/zenodo.4058004, 2021.
  24. ^ a b A. Fresnel, "Mémoire sur la loi des modifications que la réflexion imprime à la lumière polarisée" ("Memoir on the law of the modifications that reflection impresses on polarized light"), read 7 January 1823; reprinted in Fresnel, 1866, pp.767–99 (full text, published 1831), pp.753–62 (extract, published 1823). See especially pp.773 (sine law), 757 (tangent law), 760–61 and 792–6 (angles of total internal reflection for given phase differences).
  25. ^ Buchwald, 1989, pp.391–3; Whittaker, 1910, pp.133–5.
  26. ^ Buchwald, 1989, p. 392.
  27. ^ Lloyd, 1834, pp.369–70; Buchwald, 1989, pp.393–4,453; Fresnel, 1866, pp.781–96.
  28. ^ Fresnel, 1866, pp.760–61,792–6; Whewell, 1857, p. 359.
  29. ^ Whittaker, 1910, pp.177–9.
  30. ^ A. Fresnel, "Mémoire sur la double réfraction que les rayons lumineux éprouvent en traversant les aiguilles de cristal de roche suivant les directions parallèles à l'axe" ("Memoir on the double refraction that light rays undergo in traversing the needles of quartz in the directions parallel to the axis"), read 9 December 1822; printed in Fresnel, 1866, pp.731–51 (full text), pp.719–29 (extrait, first published in Bulletin de la Société philomathique for 1822, pp. 191–8).
  31. ^ Buchwald, 1989, pp.230–31; Fresnel, 1866, p. 744.
  32. ^ Buchwald, 1989, p. 442; Fresnel, 1866, pp.737–9,749.  Cf. Whewell, 1857, pp.356–8; Jenkins & White, 1976, pp.589–90.
  33. ^ Compare 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 p. 18, eq.(2.2).
  34. ^ This agrees with Born & Wolf, 1970, p. 38, Fig. 1.10.
  35. ^ Giles, C.L.; Wild, W.J. (1982). "Fresnel Reflection and Transmission at a Planar Boundary from Media of Equal Refractive Indices". Applied Physics Letters. 40 (3): 210–212. Bibcode:1982ApPhL..40..210G. doi:10.1063/1.93043. S2CID 118838757.
  36. ^ More general Brewster angles, for which the angles of incidence and refraction are not necessarily complementary, are discussed in C.L. Giles and W.J. Wild, "Brewster angles for magnetic media", International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves, vol.6, no.3 (March 1985), pp.187–97.
  37. ^ Whittaker, 1910, pp.133,148–9; Darrigol, 2012, pp.212,229–31.

Sources edit

  • M. Born and E. Wolf, 1970, Principles of Optics, 4th Ed., Oxford: Pergamon Press.
  • J.Z. Buchwald, 1989, The Rise of the Wave Theory of Light: Optical Theory and Experiment in the Early Nineteenth Century, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-07886-8.
  • R.E. Collin, 1966, Foundations for Microwave Engineering, Tokyo: McGraw-Hill.
  • O. Darrigol, 2012, A History of Optics: From Greek Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century, Oxford, ISBN 978-0-19-964437-7.
  • A. Fresnel, 1866  (ed. H. de Senarmont, E. Verdet, and L. Fresnel), Oeuvres complètes d'Augustin Fresnel, Paris: Imprimerie Impériale (3 vols., 1866–70), vol.1 (1866).
  • E. Hecht, 1987, Optics, 2nd Ed., Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-201-11609-X.
  • E. Hecht, 2002, Optics, 4th Ed., Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-321-18878-0.
  • F.A. Jenkins and H.E. White, 1976, Fundamentals of Optics, 4th Ed., New York: McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-07-032330-5.
  • H. Lloyd, 1834, "Report on the progress and present state of physical optics", Report of the Fourth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (held at Edinburgh in 1834), London: J. Murray, 1835, pp.295–413.
  • W. Whewell, 1857, History of the Inductive Sciences: From the Earliest to the Present Time, 3rd Ed., London: J.W. Parker & Son, vol.2.
  • E. T. Whittaker, 1910, A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity: From the Age of Descartes to the Close of the Nineteenth Century, London: Longmans, Green, & Co.

Further reading edit

  • Woan, G. (2010). The Cambridge Handbook of Physics Formulas. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-57507-2.
  • Griffiths, David J. (2017). "Chapter 9.3: Electromagnetic Waves in Matter". Introduction to Electrodynamics (4th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-42041-9.
  • Band, Y. B. (2010). Light and Matter: Electromagnetism, Optics, Spectroscopy and Lasers. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-89931-0.
  • Kenyon, I. R. (2008). The Light Fantastic – Introduction to Classic and Quantum Optics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-856646-5.
  • Encyclopaedia of Physics (2nd Edition), R.G. Lerner, G.L. Trigg, VHC publishers, 1991, ISBN (Verlagsgesellschaft) 3-527-26954-1, ISBN (VHC Inc.) 0-89573-752-3
  • McGraw Hill Encyclopaedia of Physics (2nd Edition), C.B. Parker, 1994, ISBN 0-07-051400-3

External links edit

  • Fresnel Equations – Wolfram.
  • Fresnel equations calculator
  • FreeSnell – Free software computes the optical properties of multilayer materials.
  • Thinfilm – Web interface for calculating optical properties of thin films and multilayer materials (reflection & transmission coefficients, ellipsometric parameters Psi & Delta).
  • Simple web interface for calculating single-interface reflection and refraction angles and strengths.
  • Reflection and transmittance for two dielectrics[permanent dead link] – Mathematica interactive webpage that shows the relations between index of refraction and reflection.
  • A self-contained first-principles derivation of the transmission and reflection probabilities from a multilayer with complex indices of refraction.

fresnel, equations, this, article, about, describing, reflection, refraction, light, uniform, planar, interfaces, diffraction, light, through, aperture, fresnel, diffraction, thin, lens, mirror, technology, fresnel, lens, fresnel, coefficients, describe, refle. This article is about the Fresnel equations describing reflection and refraction of light at uniform planar interfaces For the diffraction of light through an aperture see Fresnel diffraction For the thin lens and mirror technology see Fresnel lens The Fresnel equations or Fresnel coefficients describe the reflection and transmission of light or electromagnetic radiation in general when incident on an interface between different optical media They were deduced by French engineer and physicist Augustin Jean Fresnel f r eɪ ˈ n ɛ l who was the first to understand that light is a transverse wave when no one realized that the waves were electric and magnetic fields For the first time polarization could be understood quantitatively as Fresnel s equations correctly predicted the differing behaviour of waves of the s and p polarizations incident upon a material interface Partial transmission and reflection of a pulse travelling from a low to a high refractive index medium At near grazing incidence media interfaces appear mirror like especially due to reflection of the s polarization despite being poor reflectors at normal incidence Polarized sunglasses block the s polarization greatly reducing glare from horizontal surfaces Contents 1 Overview 1 1 S and P polarizations 2 Configuration 3 Power intensity reflection and transmission coefficients 3 1 Special cases 3 1 1 Normal incidence 3 1 2 Brewster s angle 3 1 3 Total internal reflection 3 1 4 45 Incidence 4 Complex amplitude reflection and transmission coefficients 4 1 Alternative forms 5 Multiple surfaces 6 History 7 Derivation 7 1 Material parameters 7 2 Electromagnetic plane waves 7 3 The wave vectors 7 4 The s components 7 5 The p components 7 6 Power ratios reflectivity and transmissivity 7 7 Equal refractive indices 7 8 Non magnetic media 7 9 Brewster s angle 7 10 Equal permittivities 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksOverview editWhen light strikes the interface between a medium with refractive index n1 and a second medium with refractive index n2 both reflection and refraction of the light may occur The Fresnel equations give the ratio of the reflected wave s electric field to the incident wave s electric field and the ratio of the transmitted wave s electric field to the incident wave s electric field for each of two components of polarization The magnetic fields can also be related using similar coefficients These ratios are generally complex describing not only the relative amplitudes but also the phase shifts at the interface The equations assume the interface between the media is flat and that the media are homogeneous and isotropic 1 The incident light is assumed to be a plane wave which is sufficient to solve any problem since any incident light field can be decomposed into plane waves and polarizations S and P polarizations edit Main article Plane of incidence nbsp The plane of incidence is defined by the incoming radiation s propagation vector and the normal vector of the surface There are two sets of Fresnel coefficients for two different linear polarization components of the incident wave Since any polarization state can be resolved into a combination of two orthogonal linear polarizations this is sufficient for any problem Likewise unpolarized or randomly polarized light has an equal amount of power in each of two linear polarizations The s polarization refers to polarization of a wave s electric field normal to the plane of incidence the z direction in the derivation below then the magnetic field is in the plane of incidence The p polarization refers to polarization of the electric field in the plane of incidence the xy plane in the derivation below then the magnetic field is normal to the plane of incidence Although the reflection and transmission are dependent on polarization at normal incidence 8 0 there is no distinction between them so all polarization states are governed by a single set of Fresnel coefficients and another special case is mentioned below in which that is true Configuration edit nbsp Variables used in the Fresnel equationsIn the diagram on the right an incident plane wave in the direction of the ray IO strikes the interface between two media of refractive indices n1 and n2 at point O Part of the wave is reflected in the direction OR and part refracted in the direction OT The angles that the incident reflected and refracted rays make to the normal of the interface are given as 8i 8r and 8t respectively The relationship between these angles is given by the law of reflection 8 i 8 r displaystyle theta mathrm i theta mathrm r nbsp and Snell s law n 1 sin 8 i n 2 sin 8 t displaystyle n 1 sin theta mathrm i n 2 sin theta mathrm t nbsp The behavior of light striking the interface is explained by considering the electric and magnetic fields that constitute an electromagnetic wave and the laws of electromagnetism as shown below The ratio of waves electric field or magnetic field amplitudes are obtained but in practice one is more often interested in formulae which determine power coefficients since power or irradiance is what can be directly measured at optical frequencies The power of a wave is generally proportional to the square of the electric or magnetic field amplitude Power intensity reflection and transmission coefficients edit nbsp Power coefficients air to glass nbsp Power coefficients glass to air Total internal reflection starts from 42 making reflection coefficient 1 We call the fraction of the incident power that is reflected from the interface the reflectance or reflectivity or power reflection coefficient R and the fraction that is refracted into the second medium is called the transmittance or transmissivity or power transmission coefficient T Note that these are what would be measured right at each side of an interface and do not account for attenuation of a wave in an absorbing medium following transmission or reflection 2 The reflectance for s polarized light isR s Z 2 cos 8 i Z 1 cos 8 t Z 2 cos 8 i Z 1 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle R mathrm s left frac Z 2 cos theta mathrm i Z 1 cos theta mathrm t Z 2 cos theta mathrm i Z 1 cos theta mathrm t right 2 nbsp while the reflectance for p polarized light isR p Z 2 cos 8 t Z 1 cos 8 i Z 2 cos 8 t Z 1 cos 8 i 2 displaystyle R mathrm p left frac Z 2 cos theta mathrm t Z 1 cos theta mathrm i Z 2 cos theta mathrm t Z 1 cos theta mathrm i right 2 nbsp where Z1 and Z2 are the wave impedances of media 1 and 2 respectively We assume that the media are non magnetic i e m1 m2 m0 which is typically a good approximation at optical frequencies and for transparent media at other frequencies 3 Then the wave impedances are determined solely by the refractive indices n1 and n2 Z i Z 0 n i displaystyle Z i frac Z 0 n i nbsp where Z0 is the impedance of free space and i 1 2 Making this substitution we obtain equations using the refractive indices R s n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 2 1 n 1 n 2 sin 8 i 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 2 1 n 1 n 2 sin 8 i 2 2 displaystyle R mathrm s left frac n 1 cos theta mathrm i n 2 cos theta mathrm t n 1 cos theta mathrm i n 2 cos theta mathrm t right 2 left frac n 1 cos theta mathrm i n 2 sqrt 1 left frac n 1 n 2 sin theta mathrm i right 2 n 1 cos theta mathrm i n 2 sqrt 1 left frac n 1 n 2 sin theta mathrm i right 2 right 2 nbsp R p n 1 cos 8 t n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t n 2 cos 8 i 2 n 1 1 n 1 n 2 sin 8 i 2 n 2 cos 8 i n 1 1 n 1 n 2 sin 8 i 2 n 2 cos 8 i 2 displaystyle R mathrm p left frac n 1 cos theta mathrm t n 2 cos theta mathrm i n 1 cos theta mathrm t n 2 cos theta mathrm i right 2 left frac n 1 sqrt 1 left frac n 1 n 2 sin theta mathrm i right 2 n 2 cos theta mathrm i n 1 sqrt 1 left frac n 1 n 2 sin theta mathrm i right 2 n 2 cos theta mathrm i right 2 nbsp The second form of each equation is derived from the first by eliminating 8t using Snell s law and trigonometric identities As a consequence of conservation of energy one can find the transmitted power or more correctly irradiance power per unit area simply as the portion of the incident power that isn t reflected 4 T s 1 R s displaystyle T mathrm s 1 R mathrm s nbsp andT p 1 R p displaystyle T mathrm p 1 R mathrm p nbsp Note that all such intensities are measured in terms of a wave s irradiance in the direction normal to the interface this is also what is measured in typical experiments That number could be obtained from irradiances in the direction of an incident or reflected wave given by the magnitude of a wave s Poynting vector multiplied by cos 8 for a wave at an angle 8 to the normal direction or equivalently taking the dot product of the Poynting vector with the unit vector normal to the interface This complication can be ignored in the case of the reflection coefficient since cos 8i cos 8r so that the ratio of reflected to incident irradiance in the wave s direction is the same as in the direction normal to the interface Although these relationships describe the basic physics in many practical applications one is concerned with natural light that can be described as unpolarized That means that there is an equal amount of power in the s and p polarizations so that the effective reflectivity of the material is just the average of the two reflectivities R e f f 1 2 R s R p displaystyle R mathrm eff frac 1 2 left R mathrm s R mathrm p right nbsp For low precision applications involving unpolarized light such as computer graphics rather than rigorously computing the effective reflection coefficient for each angle Schlick s approximation is often used Special cases edit Normal incidence edit For the case of normal incidence 8 i 8 t 0 displaystyle theta mathrm i theta mathrm t 0 nbsp and there is no distinction between s and p polarization Thus the reflectance simplifies toR 0 n 1 n 2 n 1 n 2 2 displaystyle R 0 left frac n 1 n 2 n 1 n 2 right 2 nbsp For common glass n2 1 5 surrounded by air n1 1 the power reflectance at normal incidence can be seen to be about 4 or 8 accounting for both sides of a glass pane Brewster s angle edit Main article Brewster s angle At a dielectric interface from n1 to n2 there is a particular angle of incidence at which Rp goes to zero and a p polarised incident wave is purely refracted thus all reflected light is s polarised This angle is known as Brewster s angle and is around 56 for n1 1 and n2 1 5 typical glass Total internal reflection edit Main article Total internal reflection When light travelling in a denser medium strikes the surface of a less dense medium i e n1 gt n2 beyond a particular incidence angle known as the critical angle all light is reflected and Rs Rp 1 This phenomenon known as total internal reflection occurs at incidence angles for which Snell s law predicts that the sine of the angle of refraction would exceed unity whereas in fact sin 8 1 for all real 8 For glass with n 1 5 surrounded by air the critical angle is approximately 42 45 Incidence edit Reflection at 45 incidence is very commonly used for making 90 turns For the case of light traversing from a less dense medium into a denser one at 45 incidence 8 45 it follows algebraically from the above equations that Rp equals the square of Rs R p R s 2 displaystyle R text p R text s 2 nbsp This can be used to either verify the consistency of the measurements of Rs and Rp or to derive one of them when the other is known This relationship is only valid for the simple case of a single plane interface between two homogeneous materials not for films on substrates where a more complex analysis is required Measurements of Rs and Rp at 45 can be used to estimate the reflectivity at normal incidence citation needed The average of averages obtained by calculating first the arithmetic as well as the geometric average of Rs and Rp and then averaging these two averages again arithmetically gives a value for R0 with an error of less than about 3 for most common optical materials citation needed This is useful because measurements at normal incidence can be difficult to achieve in an experimental setup since the incoming beam and the detector will obstruct each other However since the dependence of Rs and Rp on the angle of incidence for angles below 10 is very small a measurement at about 5 will usually be a good approximation for normal incidence while allowing for a separation of the incoming and reflected beam Complex amplitude reflection and transmission coefficients editThe above equations relating powers which could be measured with a photometer for instance are derived from the Fresnel equations which solve the physical problem in terms of electromagnetic field complex amplitudes i e considering phase shifts in addition to their amplitudes Those underlying equations supply generally complex valued ratios of those EM fields and may take several different forms depending on the formalism used The complex amplitude coefficients for reflection and transmission are usually represented by lower case r and t whereas the power coefficients are capitalized As before we are assuming the magnetic permeability µ of both media to be equal to the permeability of free space µo as is essentially true of all dielectrics at optical frequencies nbsp Amplitude coefficients air to glass nbsp Amplitude coefficients glass to airIn the following equations and graphs we adopt the following conventions For s polarization the reflection coefficient r is defined as the ratio of the reflected wave s complex electric field amplitude to that of the incident wave whereas for p polarization r is the ratio of the waves complex magnetic field amplitudes or equivalently the negative of the ratio of their electric field amplitudes The transmission coefficient t is the ratio of the transmitted wave s complex electric field amplitude to that of the incident wave for either polarization The coefficients r and t are generally different between the s and p polarizations and even at normal incidence where the designations s and p do not even apply the sign of r is reversed depending on whether the wave is considered to be s or p polarized an artifact of the adopted sign convention see graph for an air glass interface at 0 incidence The equations consider a plane wave incident on a plane interface at angle of incidence 8 i displaystyle theta mathrm i nbsp a wave reflected at angle 8 r 8 i displaystyle theta mathrm r theta mathrm i nbsp and a wave transmitted at angle 8 t displaystyle theta mathrm t nbsp In the case of an interface into an absorbing material where n is complex or total internal reflection the angle of transmission does not generally evaluate to a real number In that case however meaningful results can be obtained using formulations of these relationships in which trigonometric functions and geometric angles are avoided the inhomogeneous waves launched into the second medium cannot be described using a single propagation angle Using this convention 5 6 r s n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t t s 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t r p n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t t p 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t displaystyle begin aligned r text s amp frac n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t 3pt t text s amp frac 2n 1 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t 3pt r text p amp frac n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t 3pt t text p amp frac 2n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t end aligned nbsp One can see that ts rs 1 7 and n2 n1 tp rp 1 One can write very similar equations applying to the ratio of the waves magnetic fields but comparison of the electric fields is more conventional Because the reflected and incident waves propagate in the same medium and make the same angle with the normal to the surface the power reflection coefficient R is just the squared magnitude of r 8 R r 2 displaystyle R r 2 nbsp On the other hand calculation of the power transmission coefficient T is less straightforward since the light travels in different directions in the two media What s more the wave impedances in the two media differ power irradiance is given by the square of the electric field amplitude divided by the characteristic impedance of the medium or by the square of the magnetic field multiplied by the characteristic impedance This results in 9 T n 2 cos 8 t n 1 cos 8 i t 2 displaystyle T frac n 2 cos theta text t n 1 cos theta text i t 2 nbsp using the above definition of t The introduced factor of n2 n1 is the reciprocal of the ratio of the media s wave impedances The cos 8 factors adjust the waves powers so they are reckoned in the direction normal to the interface for both the incident and transmitted waves so that full power transmission corresponds to T 1 In the case of total internal reflection where the power transmission T is zero t nevertheless describes the electric field including its phase just beyond the interface This is an evanescent field which does not propagate as a wave thus T 0 but has nonzero values very close to the interface The phase shift of the reflected wave on total internal reflection can similarly be obtained from the phase angles of rp and rs whose magnitudes are unity in this case These phase shifts are different for s and p waves which is the well known principle by which total internal reflection is used to effect polarization transformations Alternative forms edit In the above formula for rs if we put n 2 n 1 sin 8 i sin 8 t displaystyle n 2 n 1 sin theta text i sin theta text t nbsp Snell s law and multiply the numerator and denominator by 1 n1 sin 8t we obtain 10 11 r s sin 8 i 8 t sin 8 i 8 t displaystyle r text s frac sin theta text i theta text t sin theta text i theta text t nbsp If we do likewise with the formula for rp the result is easily shown to be equivalent to 12 13 r p tan 8 i 8 t tan 8 i 8 t displaystyle r text p frac tan theta text i theta text t tan theta text i theta text t nbsp These formulas 14 15 16 are known respectively as Fresnel s sine law and Fresnel s tangent law 17 Although at normal incidence these expressions reduce to 0 0 one can see that they yield the correct results in the limit as 8i 0 Multiple surfaces editWhen light makes multiple reflections between two or more parallel surfaces the multiple beams of light generally interfere with one another resulting in net transmission and reflection amplitudes that depend on the light s wavelength The interference however is seen only when the surfaces are at distances comparable to or smaller than the light s coherence length which for ordinary white light is few micrometers it can be much larger for light from a laser An example of interference between reflections is the iridescent colours seen in a soap bubble or in thin oil films on water Applications include Fabry Perot interferometers antireflection coatings and optical filters A quantitative analysis of these effects is based on the Fresnel equations but with additional calculations to account for interference The transfer matrix method or the recursive Rouard method 18 can be used to solve multiple surface problems History editFurther information Augustin Jean Fresnel In 1808 Etienne Louis Malus discovered that when a ray of light was reflected off a non metallic surface at the appropriate angle it behaved like one of the two rays emerging from a doubly refractive calcite crystal 19 He later coined the term polarization to describe this behavior In 1815 the dependence of the polarizing angle on the refractive index was determined experimentally by David Brewster 20 But the reason for that dependence was such a deep mystery that in late 1817 Thomas Young was moved to write T he great difficulty of all which is to assign a sufficient reason for the reflection or nonreflection of a polarised ray will probably long remain to mortify the vanity of an ambitious philosophy completely unresolved by any theory 21 In 1821 however Augustin Jean Fresnel derived results equivalent to his sine and tangent laws above by modeling light waves as transverse elastic waves with vibrations perpendicular to what had previously been called the plane of polarization Fresnel promptly confirmed by experiment that the equations correctly predicted the direction of polarization of the reflected beam when the incident beam was polarized at 45 to the plane of incidence for light incident from air onto glass or water in particular the equations gave the correct polarization at Brewster s angle 22 The experimental confirmation was reported in a postscript to the work in which Fresnel first revealed his theory that light waves including unpolarized waves were purely transverse 23 Details of Fresnel s derivation including the modern forms of the sine law and tangent law were given later in a memoir read to the French Academy of Sciences in January 1823 24 That derivation combined conservation of energy with continuity of the tangential vibration at the interface but failed to allow for any condition on the normal component of vibration 25 The first derivation from electromagnetic principles was given by Hendrik Lorentz in 1875 26 In the same memoir of January 1823 24 Fresnel found that for angles of incidence greater than the critical angle his formulas for the reflection coefficients rs and rp gave complex values with unit magnitudes Noting that the magnitude as usual represented the ratio of peak amplitudes he guessed that the argument represented the phase shift and verified the hypothesis experimentally 27 The verification involved calculating the angle of incidence that would introduce a total phase difference of 90 between the s and p components for various numbers of total internal reflections at that angle generally there were two solutions subjecting light to that number of total internal reflections at that angle of incidence with an initial linear polarization at 45 to the plane of incidence and checking that the final polarization was circular 28 Thus he finally had a quantitative theory for what we now call the Fresnel rhomb a device that he had been using in experiments in one form or another since 1817 see Fresnel rhomb History The success of the complex reflection coefficient inspired James MacCullagh and Augustin Louis Cauchy beginning in 1836 to analyze reflection from metals by using the Fresnel equations with a complex refractive index 29 Four weeks before he presented his completed theory of total internal reflection and the rhomb Fresnel submitted a memoir 30 in which he introduced the needed terms linear polarization circular polarization and elliptical polarization 31 and in which he explained optical rotation as a species of birefringence linearly polarized light can be resolved into two circularly polarized components rotating in opposite directions and if these propagate at different speeds the phase difference between them hence the orientation of their linearly polarized resultant will vary continuously with distance 32 Thus Fresnel s interpretation of the complex values of his reflection coefficients marked the confluence of several streams of his research and arguably the essential completion of his reconstruction of physical optics on the transverse wave hypothesis see Augustin Jean Fresnel Derivation editHere we systematically derive the above relations from electromagnetic premises Material parameters edit In order to compute meaningful Fresnel coefficients we must assume that the medium is approximately linear and homogeneous If the medium is also isotropic the four field vectors E B D H are related byD ϵ E B m H displaystyle begin aligned mathbf D amp epsilon mathbf E mathbf B amp mu mathbf H end aligned nbsp where ϵ and m are scalars known respectively as the electric permittivity and the magnetic permeability of the medium For a vacuum these have the values ϵ0 and m0 respectively Hence we define the relative permittivity or dielectric constant ϵrel ϵ ϵ0 and the relative permeability mrel m m0 In optics it is common to assume that the medium is non magnetic so that mrel 1 For ferromagnetic materials at radio microwave frequencies larger values of mrel must be taken into account But for optically transparent media and for all other materials at optical frequencies except possible metamaterials mrel is indeed very close to 1 that is m m0 In optics one usually knows the refractive index n of the medium which is the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum c to the speed of light in the medium In the analysis of partial reflection and transmission one is also interested in the electromagnetic wave impedance Z which is the ratio of the amplitude of E to the amplitude of H It is therefore desirable to express n and Z in terms of ϵ and m and thence to relate Z to n The last mentioned relation however will make it convenient to derive the reflection coefficients in terms of the wave admittance Y which is the reciprocal of the wave impedance Z In the case of uniform plane sinusoidal waves the wave impedance or admittance is known as the intrinsic impedance or admittance of the medium This case is the one for which the Fresnel coefficients are to be derived Electromagnetic plane waves edit In a uniform plane sinusoidal electromagnetic wave the electric field E has the form E k e i k r w t displaystyle mathbf E k e i mathbf k cdot r omega t nbsp 1 where Ek is the constant complex amplitude vector i is the imaginary unit k is the wave vector whose magnitude k is the angular wavenumber r is the position vector w is the angular frequency t is time and it is understood that the real part of the expression is the physical field Note 1 The value of the expression is unchanged if the position r varies in a direction normal to k hence k is normal to the wavefronts To advance the phase by the angle ϕ we replace wt by wt ϕ that is we replace wt by wt ϕ with the result that the complex field is multiplied by e iϕ So a phase advance is equivalent to multiplication by a complex constant with a negative argument This becomes more obvious when the field 1 is factored as Ek eik re iwt where the last factor contains the time dependence That factor also implies that differentiation w r t time corresponds to multiplication by iw Note 2 If ℓ is the component of r in the direction of k the field 1 can be written Ek ei kℓ wt If the argument of ei is to be constant ℓ must increase at the velocity w k displaystyle omega k nbsp known as the phase velocity vp This in turn is equal to c n displaystyle c n nbsp Solving for k gives k n w c displaystyle k n omega c nbsp 2 As usual we drop the time dependent factor e iwt which is understood to multiply every complex field quantity The electric field for a uniform plane sine wave will then be represented by the location dependent phasor E k e i k r displaystyle mathbf E k e i mathbf k cdot r nbsp 3 For fields of that form Faraday s law and the Maxwell Ampere law respectively reduce to 33 w B k E w D k H displaystyle begin aligned omega mathbf B amp mathbf k times mathbf E omega mathbf D amp mathbf k times mathbf H end aligned nbsp Putting B mH and D ϵE as above we can eliminate B and D to obtain equations in only E and H w m H k E w ϵ E k H displaystyle begin aligned omega mu mathbf H amp mathbf k times mathbf E omega epsilon mathbf E amp mathbf k times mathbf H end aligned nbsp If the material parameters ϵ and m are real as in a lossless dielectric these equations show that k E H form a right handed orthogonal triad so that the same equations apply to the magnitudes of the respective vectors Taking the magnitude equations and substituting from 2 we obtain m c H n E ϵ c E n H displaystyle begin aligned mu cH amp nE epsilon cE amp nH end aligned nbsp where H and E are the magnitudes of H and E Multiplying the last two equations gives n c m ϵ displaystyle n c sqrt mu epsilon nbsp 4 Dividing or cross multiplying the same two equations gives H YE where Y ϵ m displaystyle Y sqrt epsilon mu nbsp 5 This is the intrinsic admittance From 4 we obtain the phase velocity c n 1 m ϵ displaystyle c n 1 big sqrt mu epsilon nbsp For a vacuum this reduces to c 1 m 0 ϵ 0 displaystyle c 1 big sqrt mu 0 epsilon 0 nbsp Dividing the second result by the first givesn m rel ϵ rel displaystyle n sqrt mu text rel epsilon text rel nbsp For a non magnetic medium the usual case this becomes n ϵ rel displaystyle n sqrt epsilon text rel nbsp Taking the reciprocal of 5 we find that the intrinsic impedance is Z m ϵ textstyle Z sqrt mu epsilon nbsp In a vacuum this takes the value Z 0 m 0 ϵ 0 377 W textstyle Z 0 sqrt mu 0 epsilon 0 approx 377 Omega nbsp known as the impedance of free space By division Z Z 0 m rel ϵ rel textstyle Z Z 0 sqrt mu text rel epsilon text rel nbsp For a non magnetic medium this becomes Z Z 0 ϵ rel Z 0 n displaystyle Z Z 0 big sqrt epsilon text rel Z 0 n nbsp The wave vectors edit nbsp Incident reflected and transmitted wave vectors ki kr and kt for incidence from a medium with refractive index n1 to a medium with refractive index n2 The red arrows are perpendicular to the wave vectors In Cartesian coordinates x y z let the region y lt 0 have refractive index n1 intrinsic admittance Y1 etc and let the region y gt 0 have refractive index n2 intrinsic admittance Y2 etc Then the xz plane is the interface and the y axis is normal to the interface see diagram Let i and j in bold roman type be the unit vectors in the x and y directions respectively Let the plane of incidence be the xy plane the plane of the page with the angle of incidence 8i measured from j towards i Let the angle of refraction measured in the same sense be 8t where the subscript t stands for transmitted reserving r for reflected In the absence of Doppler shifts w does not change on reflection or refraction Hence by 2 the magnitude of the wave vector is proportional to the refractive index So for a given w if we redefine k as the magnitude of the wave vector in the reference medium for which n 1 then the wave vector has magnitude n1k in the first medium region y lt 0 in the diagram and magnitude n2k in the second medium From the magnitudes and the geometry we find that the wave vectors arek i n 1 k i sin 8 i j cos 8 i k r n 1 k i sin 8 i j cos 8 i k t n 2 k i sin 8 t j cos 8 t k i n 1 sin 8 i j n 2 cos 8 t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf k text i amp n 1 k mathbf i sin theta text i mathbf j cos theta text i 5ex mathbf k text r amp n 1 k mathbf i sin theta text i mathbf j cos theta text i 5ex mathbf k text t amp n 2 k mathbf i sin theta text t mathbf j cos theta text t amp k mathbf i n 1 sin theta text i mathbf j n 2 cos theta text t end aligned nbsp where the last step uses Snell s law The corresponding dot products in the phasor form 3 are k i r n 1 k x sin 8 i y cos 8 i k r r n 1 k x sin 8 i y cos 8 i k t r k n 1 x sin 8 i n 2 y cos 8 t displaystyle begin aligned mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r amp n 1 k x sin theta text i y cos theta text i mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r amp n 1 k x sin theta text i y cos theta text i mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r amp k n 1 x sin theta text i n 2 y cos theta text t end aligned nbsp 6 Hence At y 0 k i r k r r k t r n 1 k x sin 8 i displaystyle y 0 mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r n 1 kx sin theta text i nbsp 7 The s components edit For the s polarization the E field is parallel to the z axis and may therefore be described by its component in the z direction Let the reflection and transmission coefficients be rs and ts respectively Then if the incident E field is taken to have unit amplitude the phasor form 3 of its z component is E i e i k i r displaystyle E text i e i mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r nbsp 8 and the reflected and transmitted fields in the same form are E r r s e i k r r E t t s e i k t r displaystyle begin aligned E text r amp r s e i mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r E text t amp t s e i mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r end aligned nbsp 9 Under the sign convention used in this article a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one that preserves the direction of the transverse field meaning in this context the field normal to the plane of incidence For the s polarization that means the E field If the incident reflected and transmitted E fields in the above equations are in the z direction out of the page then the respective H fields are in the directions of the red arrows since k E H form a right handed orthogonal triad The H fields may therefore be described by their components in the directions of those arrows denoted by Hi Hr Ht Then since H YE H i Y 1 e i k i r H r Y 1 r s e i k r r H t Y 2 t s e i k t r displaystyle begin aligned H text i amp Y 1 e i mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r H text r amp Y 1 r s e i mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r H text t amp Y 2 t s e i mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r end aligned nbsp 10 At the interface by the usual interface conditions for electromagnetic fields the tangential components of the E and H fields must be continuous that is E i E r E t H i cos 8 i H r cos 8 i H t cos 8 t at y 0 displaystyle left begin aligned E text i E text r amp E text t H text i cos theta text i H text r cos theta text i amp H text t cos theta text t end aligned right text at y 0 nbsp 11 When we substitute from equations 8 to 10 and then from 7 the exponential factors cancel out so that the interface conditions reduce to the simultaneous equations 1 r s t s Y 1 cos 8 i Y 1 r s cos 8 i Y 2 t s cos 8 t displaystyle begin aligned 1 r text s amp t text s Y 1 cos theta text i Y 1 r text s cos theta text i amp Y 2 t text s cos theta text t end aligned nbsp 12 which are easily solved for rs and ts yielding r s Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t displaystyle r text s frac Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t nbsp 13 and t s 2 Y 1 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t displaystyle t text s frac 2Y 1 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t nbsp 14 At normal incidence 8i 8t 0 indicated by an additional subscript 0 these results become r s0 Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 Y 2 displaystyle r text s0 frac Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 Y 2 nbsp 15 and t s0 2 Y 1 Y 1 Y 2 displaystyle t text s0 frac 2Y 1 Y 1 Y 2 nbsp 16 At grazing incidence 8i 90 we have cos 8i 0 hence rs 1 and ts 0 The p components edit For the p polarization the incident reflected and transmitted E fields are parallel to the red arrows and may therefore be described by their components in the directions of those arrows Let those components be Ei Er Et redefining the symbols for the new context Let the reflection and transmission coefficients be rp and tp Then if the incident E field is taken to have unit amplitude we have E i e i k i r E r r p e i k r r E t t p e i k t r displaystyle begin aligned E text i amp e i mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r E text r amp r p e i mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r E text t amp t p e i mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r end aligned nbsp 17 If the E fields are in the directions of the red arrows then in order for k E H to form a right handed orthogonal triad the respective H fields must be in the z direction into the page and may therefore be described by their components in that direction This is consistent with the adopted sign convention namely that a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one that preserves the direction of the transverse field the H field in the case of the p polarization The agreement of the other field with the red arrows reveals an alternative definition of the sign convention that a positive reflection or transmission coefficient is one for which the field vector in the plane of incidence points towards the same medium before and after reflection or transmission 34 So for the incident reflected and transmitted H fields let the respective components in the z direction be Hi Hr Ht Then since H YE H i Y 1 e i k i r H r Y 1 r p e i k r r H t Y 2 t p e i k t r displaystyle begin aligned H text i amp Y 1 e i mathbf k text i mathbf cdot r H text r amp Y 1 r p e i mathbf k text r mathbf cdot r H text t amp Y 2 t p e i mathbf k text t mathbf cdot r end aligned nbsp 18 At the interface the tangential components of the E and H fields must be continuous that is E i cos 8 i E r cos 8 i E t cos 8 t H i H r H t at y 0 displaystyle left begin aligned E text i cos theta text i E text r cos theta text i amp E text t cos theta text t H text i H text r amp H text t end aligned right text at y 0 nbsp 19 When we substitute from equations 17 and 18 and then from 7 the exponential factors again cancel out so that the interface conditions reduce to cos 8 i r p cos 8 i t p cos 8 t Y 1 Y 1 r p Y 2 t p displaystyle begin aligned cos theta text i r text p cos theta text i amp t text p cos theta text t Y 1 Y 1 r text p amp Y 2 t text p end aligned nbsp 20 Solving for rp and tp we find r p Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t displaystyle r text p frac Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t nbsp 21 and t p 2 Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t displaystyle t text p frac 2Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t nbsp 22 At normal incidence 8i 8t 0 indicated by an additional subscript 0 these results become r p0 Y 2 Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 displaystyle r text p0 frac Y 2 Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 nbsp 23 and t p0 2 Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 displaystyle t text p0 frac 2Y 1 Y 2 Y 1 nbsp 24 At grazing incidence 8i 90 we again have cos 8i 0 hence rp 1 and tp 0 Comparing 23 and 24 with 15 and 16 we see that at normal incidence under the adopted sign convention the transmission coefficients for the two polarizations are equal whereas the reflection coefficients have equal magnitudes but opposite signs While this clash of signs is a disadvantage of the convention the attendant advantage is that the signs agree at grazing incidence Power ratios reflectivity and transmissivity edit The Poynting vector for a wave is a vector whose component in any direction is the irradiance power per unit area of that wave on a surface perpendicular to that direction For a plane sinusoidal wave the Poynting vector is 1 2 Re E H where E and H are due only to the wave in question and the asterisk denotes complex conjugation Inside a lossless dielectric the usual case E and H are in phase and at right angles to each other and to the wave vector k so for s polarization using the z and xy components of E and H respectively or for p polarization using the xy and z components of E and H the irradiance in the direction of k is given simply by EH 2 which is E2 2Z in a medium of intrinsic impedance Z 1 Y To compute the irradiance in the direction normal to the interface as we shall require in the definition of the power transmission coefficient we could use only the x component rather than the full xy component of H or E or equivalently simply multiply EH 2 by the proper geometric factor obtaining E2 2Z cos 8 From equations 13 and 21 taking squared magnitudes we find that the reflectivity ratio of reflected power to incident power is R s Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle R text s left frac Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 25 for the s polarization and R p Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle R text p left frac Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 26 for the p polarization Note that when comparing the powers of two such waves in the same medium and with the same cos 8 the impedance and geometric factors mentioned above are identical and cancel out But in computing the power transmission below these factors must be taken into account The simplest way to obtain the power transmission coefficient transmissivity the ratio of transmitted power to incident power in the direction normal to the interface i e the y direction is to use R T 1 conservation of energy In this way we find T s 1 R s 4 Re Y 1 Y 2 cos 8 i cos 8 t Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle T text s 1 R text s frac 4 text Re Y 1 Y 2 cos theta text i cos theta text t left Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 25T for the s polarization and T p 1 R p 4 Re Y 1 Y 2 cos 8 i cos 8 t Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle T text p 1 R text p frac 4 text Re Y 1 Y 2 cos theta text i cos theta text t left Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 26T for the p polarization In the case of an interface between two lossless media for which ϵ and m are real and positive one can obtain these results directly using the squared magnitudes of the amplitude transmission coefficients that we found earlier in equations 14 and 22 But for given amplitude as noted above the component of the Poynting vector in the y direction is proportional to the geometric factor cos 8 and inversely proportional to the wave impedance Z Applying these corrections to each wave we obtain two ratios multiplying the square of the amplitude transmission coefficient T s 2 Y 1 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t 2 Y 2 Y 1 cos 8 t cos 8 i 4 Y 1 Y 2 cos 8 i cos 8 t Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle T text s left frac 2Y 1 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t right 2 frac Y 2 Y 1 frac cos theta text t cos theta text i frac 4Y 1 Y 2 cos theta text i cos theta text t left Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 27 for the s polarization and T p 2 Y 1 cos 8 i Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t 2 Y 2 Y 1 cos 8 t cos 8 i 4 Y 1 Y 2 cos 8 i cos 8 t Y 2 cos 8 i Y 1 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle T text p left frac 2Y 1 cos theta text i Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t right 2 frac Y 2 Y 1 frac cos theta text t cos theta text i frac 4Y 1 Y 2 cos theta text i cos theta text t left Y 2 cos theta text i Y 1 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 28 for the p polarization The last two equations apply only to lossless dielectrics and only at incidence angles smaller than the critical angle beyond which of course T 0 For unpolarized light T 1 2 T s T p displaystyle T 1 over 2 T s T p nbsp R 1 2 R s R p displaystyle R 1 over 2 R s R p nbsp Where R T 1 displaystyle R T 1 nbsp Equal refractive indices edit From equations 4 and 5 we see that two dissimilar media will have the same refractive index but different admittances if the ratio of their permeabilities is the inverse of the ratio of their permittivities In that unusual situation we have 8t 8i that is the transmitted ray is undeviated so that the cosines in equations 13 14 21 22 and 25 to 28 cancel out and all the reflection and transmission ratios become independent of the angle of incidence in other words the ratios for normal incidence become applicable to all angles of incidence 35 When extended to spherical reflection or scattering this results in the Kerker effect for Mie scattering Non magnetic media edit Since the Fresnel equations were developed for optics they are usually given for non magnetic materials Dividing 4 by 5 yieldsY n c m displaystyle Y frac n c mu nbsp For non magnetic media we can substitute the vacuum permeability m0 for m so that Y 1 n 1 c m 0 Y 2 n 2 c m 0 displaystyle Y 1 frac n 1 c mu 0 Y 2 frac n 2 c mu 0 nbsp that is the admittances are simply proportional to the corresponding refractive indices When we make these substitutions in equations 13 to 16 and equations 21 to 26 the factor cm0 cancels out For the amplitude coefficients we obtain 5 6 r s n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t displaystyle r text s frac n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t nbsp 29 t s 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t displaystyle t text s frac 2n 1 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t nbsp 30 r p n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t displaystyle r text p frac n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t nbsp 31 t p 2 n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t displaystyle t text p frac 2n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t nbsp 32 For the case of normal incidence these reduce to r s0 n 1 n 2 n 1 n 2 displaystyle r text s0 frac n 1 n 2 n 1 n 2 nbsp 33 t s0 2 n 1 n 1 n 2 displaystyle t text s0 frac 2n 1 n 1 n 2 nbsp 34 r p0 n 2 n 1 n 2 n 1 displaystyle r text p0 frac n 2 n 1 n 2 n 1 nbsp 35 t p0 2 n 1 n 2 n 1 displaystyle t text p0 frac 2n 1 n 2 n 1 nbsp 36 The power reflection coefficients become R s n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t n 1 cos 8 i n 2 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle R text s left frac n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t n 1 cos theta text i n 2 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 37 R p n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t n 2 cos 8 i n 1 cos 8 t 2 displaystyle R text p left frac n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t n 2 cos theta text i n 1 cos theta text t right 2 nbsp 38 The power transmissions can then be found from T 1 R Brewster s angle edit For equal permeabilities e g non magnetic media if 8i and 8t are complementary we can substitute sin 8t for cos 8i and sin 8i for cos 8t so that the numerator in equation 31 becomes n2 sin 8t n1 sin 8i which is zero by Snell s law Hence rp 0 and only the s polarized component is reflected This is what happens at the Brewster angle Substituting cos 8i for sin 8t in Snell s law we readily obtain 8 i arctan n 2 n 1 displaystyle theta text i arctan n 2 n 1 nbsp 39 for Brewster s angle Equal permittivities edit Although it is not encountered in practice the equations can also apply to the case of two media with a common permittivity but different refractive indices due to different permeabilities From equations 4 and 5 if ϵ is fixed instead of m then Y becomes inversely proportional to n with the result that the subscripts 1 and 2 in equations 29 to 38 are interchanged due to the additional step of multiplying the numerator and denominator by n1n2 Hence in 29 and 31 the expressions for rs and rp in terms of refractive indices will be interchanged so that Brewster s angle 39 will give rs 0 instead of rp 0 and any beam reflected at that angle will be p polarized instead of s polarized 36 Similarly Fresnel s sine law will apply to the p polarization instead of the s polarization and his tangent law to the s polarization instead of the p polarization This switch of polarizations has an analog in the old mechanical theory of light waves see History above One could predict reflection coefficients that agreed with observation by supposing like Fresnel that different refractive indices were due to different densities and that the vibrations were normal to what was then called the plane of polarization or by supposing like MacCullagh and Neumann that different refractive indices were due to different elasticities and that the vibrations were parallel to that plane 37 Thus the condition of equal permittivities and unequal permeabilities although not realistic is of some historical interest See also editJones calculus Polarization mixing Index matching material Field and power quantities Fresnel rhomb Fresnel s apparatus to produce circularly polarised light Reflection loss Specular reflection Schlick s approximation Snell s window X ray reflectivity Plane of incidence Reflections of signals on conducting linesNotes edit The above form 1 is typically used by physicists Electrical engineers typically prefer the form Ek ej wt k r that is they not only use j instead of i for the imaginary unit but also change the sign of the exponent with the result that the whole expression is replaced by its complex conjugate leaving the real part unchanged Cf e g Collin 1966 p 41 eq 2 81 The electrical engineers form and the formulas derived therefrom may be converted to the physicists convention by substituting i for j In the electrical engineering convention the time dependent factor is e jwt so that a phase advance corresponds to multiplication by a complex constant with a positive argument and differentiation w r t time corresponds to multiplication by jw This article however uses the physics convention whose time dependent factor is e iwt Although the imaginary unit does not appear explicitly in the results given here the time dependent factor affects the interpretation of any results that turn out to be complex References edit Born amp Wolf 1970 p 38 Hecht 1987 p 100 Driggers Ronald G Hoffman Craig Driggers Ronald 2011 Encyclopedia of Optical Engineering doi 10 1081 E EOE ISBN 978 0 8247 0940 2 Hecht 1987 p 102 a b Lecture notes by Bo Sernelius main site Archived 2012 02 22 at the Wayback Machine see especially Lecture 12 a b Born amp Wolf 1970 p 40 eqs 20 21 Hecht 2002 p 116 eqs 4 49 4 50 Hecht 2002 p 120 eq 4 56 Hecht 2002 p 120 eq 4 57 Fresnel 1866 p 773 Hecht 2002 p 115 eq 4 42 Fresnel 1866 p 757 Hecht 2002 p 115 eq 4 43 E Verdet in Fresnel 1866 p 789n Born amp Wolf 1970 p 40 eqs 21a Jenkins amp White 1976 p 524 eqs 25a Whittaker 1910 p 134 Darrigol 2012 p 213 Heavens O S 1955 Optical Properties of Thin Films Academic Press chapt 4 Darrigol 2012 pp 191 2 D Brewster On the laws which regulate the polarisation of light by reflexion from transparent bodies Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society vol 105 pp 125 59 read 16 March 1815 T Young Chromatics written Sep Oct 1817 Supplement to the Fourth Fifth and Sixth Editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 3 first half issued February 1818 pp 141 63 concluding sentence Buchwald 1989 pp 390 91 Fresnel 1866 pp 646 8 A Fresnel Note sur le calcul des teintes que la polarisation developpe dans les lames cristallisees et seq Annales de Chimie et de Physique vol 17 pp 102 11 May 1821 167 96 June 1821 312 15 Postscript July 1821 reprinted in Fresnel 1866 pp 609 48 translated as On the calculation of the tints that polarization develops in crystalline plates amp postscript Zenodo 4058004 doi 10 5281 zenodo 4058004 2021 a b A Fresnel Memoire sur la loi des modifications que la reflexion imprime a la lumiere polarisee Memoir on the law of the modifications that reflection impresses on polarized light read 7 January 1823 reprinted in Fresnel 1866 pp 767 99 full text published 1831 pp 753 62 extract published 1823 See especially pp 773 sine law 757 tangent law 760 61 and 792 6 angles of total internal reflection for given phase differences Buchwald 1989 pp 391 3 Whittaker 1910 pp 133 5 Buchwald 1989 p 392 Lloyd 1834 pp 369 70 Buchwald 1989 pp 393 4 453 Fresnel 1866 pp 781 96 Fresnel 1866 pp 760 61 792 6 Whewell 1857 p 359 Whittaker 1910 pp 177 9 A Fresnel Memoire sur la double refraction que les rayons lumineux eprouvent en traversant les aiguilles de cristal de roche suivant les directions paralleles a l axe Memoir on the double refraction that light rays undergo in traversing the needles of quartz in the directions parallel to the axis read 9 December 1822 printed in Fresnel 1866 pp 731 51 full text pp 719 29 extrait first published in Bulletin de la Societe philomathique for 1822 pp 191 8 Buchwald 1989 pp 230 31 Fresnel 1866 p 744 Buchwald 1989 p 442 Fresnel 1866 pp 737 9 749 Cf Whewell 1857 pp 356 8 Jenkins amp White 1976 pp 589 90 Compare 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 p 18 eq 2 2 This agrees with Born amp Wolf 1970 p 38 Fig 1 10 Giles C L Wild W J 1982 Fresnel Reflection and Transmission at a Planar Boundary from Media of Equal Refractive Indices Applied Physics Letters 40 3 210 212 Bibcode 1982ApPhL 40 210G doi 10 1063 1 93043 S2CID 118838757 More general Brewster angles for which the angles of incidence and refraction are not necessarily complementary are discussed in C L Giles and W J Wild Brewster angles for magnetic media International Journal of Infrared and Millimeter Waves vol 6 no 3 March 1985 pp 187 97 Whittaker 1910 pp 133 148 9 Darrigol 2012 pp 212 229 31 Sources editM Born and E Wolf 1970 Principles of Optics 4th Ed Oxford Pergamon Press J Z Buchwald 1989 The Rise of the Wave Theory of Light Optical Theory and Experiment in the Early Nineteenth Century University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 07886 8 R E Collin 1966 Foundations for Microwave Engineering Tokyo McGraw Hill O Darrigol 2012 A History of Optics From Greek Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 964437 7 A Fresnel 1866 ed H de Senarmont E Verdet and L Fresnel Oeuvres completes d Augustin Fresnel Paris Imprimerie Imperiale 3 vols 1866 70 vol 1 1866 E Hecht 1987 Optics 2nd Ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 11609 X E Hecht 2002 Optics 4th Ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 321 18878 0 F A Jenkins and H E White 1976 Fundamentals of Optics 4th Ed New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 032330 5 H Lloyd 1834 Report on the progress and present state of physical optics Report of the Fourth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science held at Edinburgh in 1834 London J Murray 1835 pp 295 413 W Whewell 1857 History of the Inductive Sciences From the Earliest to the Present Time 3rd Ed London J W Parker amp Son vol 2 E T Whittaker 1910 A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity From the Age of Descartes to the Close of the Nineteenth Century London Longmans Green amp Co Further reading editThis further reading section may contain inappropriate or excessive suggestions that may not follow Wikipedia s guidelines Please ensure that only a reasonable number of balanced topical reliable and notable further reading suggestions are given removing less relevant or redundant publications with the same point of view where appropriate Consider utilising appropriate texts as inline sources or creating a separate bibliography article October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Woan G 2010 The Cambridge Handbook of Physics Formulas Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57507 2 Griffiths David J 2017 Chapter 9 3 Electromagnetic Waves in Matter Introduction to Electrodynamics 4th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 42041 9 Band Y B 2010 Light and Matter Electromagnetism Optics Spectroscopy and Lasers John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 89931 0 Kenyon I R 2008 The Light Fantastic Introduction to Classic and Quantum Optics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 856646 5 Encyclopaedia of Physics 2nd Edition R G Lerner G L Trigg VHC publishers 1991 ISBN Verlagsgesellschaft 3 527 26954 1 ISBN VHC Inc 0 89573 752 3 McGraw Hill Encyclopaedia of Physics 2nd Edition C B Parker 1994 ISBN 0 07 051400 3External links editFresnel Equations Wolfram Fresnel equations calculator FreeSnell Free software computes the optical properties of multilayer materials Thinfilm Web interface for calculating optical properties of thin films and multilayer materials reflection amp transmission coefficients ellipsometric parameters Psi amp Delta Simple web interface for calculating single interface reflection and refraction angles and strengths Reflection and transmittance for two dielectrics permanent dead link Mathematica interactive webpage that shows the relations between index of refraction and reflection A self contained first principles derivation of the transmission and reflection probabilities from a multilayer with complex indices of refraction Portal nbsp Physics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fresnel equations amp oldid 1181353748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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