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| {{For|the photographic filter|Polarizing filter (photography)}}
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| [[File:Polarizer Through Glass.jpg|thumb|right|A polarizing filter cuts down the reflections (top) and made it possible to see the photographer through the glass at roughly [[Brewster's angle]] although reflections off the back window of the car are not cut because they are less-strongly polarized, according to the [[Fresnel equations]].]]
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| A '''polarizer''' or '''polariser''' is an [[optical filter]] that passes light of a specific [[polarization (waves)|polarization]] and blocks waves of other polarizations. It can convert a beam of light of undefined or mixed polarization into a beam with well-defined polarization. The common types of polarizers are [[linear polarizer]]s and [[circular polarizer]]s. Polarizers are used in many [[optics|optical]] techniques and [[optical instrument|instruments]], and [[filter (photography)|polarizing filters]] find applications in [[photography]] and [[liquid crystal display]] technology. Polarizers can also be made for other types of [[electromagnetic wave]]s besides light, such as [[radio wave]]s, [[microwave]]s, and [[X-ray]]s.
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| == Linear polarizers ==
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| '''Linear polarizers''' can be divided into two general categories: '''absorptive polarizers''', where the unwanted polarization states are [[absorption (optics)|absorbed]] by the device, and '''beam-splitting polarizers''', where the unpolarized beam is split into two beams with opposite polarization states.
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| === Wire-grid polarizer ===
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| [[Image:wire-grid-polarizer.svg|right|thumb|350px|A wire-grid polarizer converts an unpolarized beam into one with a single linear polarization. Coloured arrows depict the electric field vector. The diagonally polarized waves also contribute to the transmitted polarization. Their vertical components are transmitted, while the horizontal components are absorbed and reflected. (This is not clearly shown.)]]
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| The simplest linear polarizer in concept is the ''wire-grid polarizer'', which consists of a regular array of fine parallel metallic wires, placed in a plane perpendicular to the incident beam. Electromagnetic waves which have a component of their [[electric field]]s aligned parallel to the wires induce the movement of [[electron]]s along the length of the wires. Since the electrons are free to move in this direction, the polarizer behaves in a similar manner to the surface of a [[metal]] when reflecting light, and the wave is reflected backwards along the incident beam (minus a small amount of energy lost to [[joule heating]] of the wire).<ref name="polz_abs">Hecht, Eugene. ''Optics'', 2nd ed., Addison Wesley (1990) ISBN 0-201-11609-X. Chapter 8.</ref>
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| For waves with electric fields perpendicular to the wires, the electrons cannot move very far across the width of each wire; therefore, little energy is reflected, and the incident wave is able to pass through the grid. Since electric field components parallel to the wires are reflected, the transmitted wave has an electric field purely in the direction perpendicular to the wires, and is thus [[Linear polarization|linearly polarized]]. Note that the polarization direction is ''perpendicular'' to the wires; the notion that waves "slip through" the gaps between the wires is wrong.<ref name="polz_abs" />
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| For practical use, the separation distance between the wires must be less than the [[wavelength]] of the radiation, and the wire width should be a small fraction of this distance. This means that wire-grid polarizers are generally only used for [[microwave]]s and for far- and mid-[[infrared]] light. Using advanced [[lithography|lithographic]] techniques, very tight pitch metallic grids can be made which polarize visible light. Since the [[degree of polarization]] depends little on wavelength and angle of incidence, they are used for broad-band applications such as projection.
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| === Absorptive polarizers ===
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| Certain [[crystal]]s, due to the effects described by [[crystal optics]], show ''[[dichroism]]'', preferential absorption of light which is polarized in particular directions. They can therefore be used as linear polarizers. The best known crystal of this type is [[tourmaline]]. However, this crystal is seldom used as a polarizer, since the dichroic effect is strongly wavelength dependent and the crystal appears coloured. [[Herapathite]] is also dichroic, and is not strongly coloured, but is difficult to grow in large crystals.
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| A [[Polaroid (polarizer)|Polaroid]] polarizing filter functions similarly on an atomic scale to the wire-grid polarizer. It was originally made of microscopic herapathite crystals. Its current ''H-sheet'' form is made from [[polyvinyl alcohol]] (PVA) plastic with an [[iodine]] doping. Stretching of the sheet during manufacture causes the PVA chains to align in one particular direction. [[Valence electron]]s from the iodine dopant are able to move linearly along the polymer chains, but not transverse to them. So incident light polarized parallel to the chains is absorbed by the sheet; light polarized perpendicularly to the chains is transmitted. The durability and practicality of Polaroid makes it the most common type of polarizer in use, for example for [[sunglasses]], [[photographic filter]]s, and [[liquid crystal display]]s. It is also much cheaper than other types of polarizer.
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| A modern type of absorptive polarizer is made of elongated silver nanoparticles embedded in thin (≤0.5 mm) glass plates. These polarizers are more durable, and can polarize light much better than plastic Polaroid film, achieving polarization ratios as high as 100,000:1 and absorption of correctly polarized light as low as 1.5%.<ref>{{cite web |title=Polarcor glass polarizers: Product information |url=http://www.corning.com/docs/specialtymaterials/pisheets/Pi201.pdf |format=pdf |work=Corning.com |date=December 2006 |accessdate=2008-08-08}}</ref> Such glass polarizers perform best for short-wavelength [[infrared]] light, and are widely used in [[optical fiber communications]].
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| === Beam-splitting polarizers ===
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| [[Beam splitter|Beam-splitting]] polarizers split the incident beam into two beams of differing linear polarization. For an ideal polarizing beamsplitter these would be fully polarized, with orthogonal polarizations. For many common beam-splitting polarizers, however, only one of the two output beams is fully polarized. The other contains a mixture of polarization states.
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| Unlike absorptive polarizers, beam splitting polarizers do not need to absorb and dissipate the energy of the rejected polarization state, and so they are more suitable for use with high intensity beams such as [[laser]] light. True polarizing beamsplitters are also useful where the two polarization components are to be analyzed or used simultaneously.
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| ==== Polarization by reflection ====
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| [[Image:Brewster-polarizer.svg|right|thumb|350px|A stack of plates at Brewster's angle to a beam reflects off a fraction of the ''s''-polarized light at each surface, leaving a ''p''-polarized beam. Full polarization at Brewster's angle requires many more plates than shown. The arrows indicate the direction of the electrical field, not the magnetic field, which is perpendicular to the electric field]]
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| When light reflects at an angle from an interface between two transparent materials, the reflectivity is different for light polarized in the [[plane of incidence]] and light polarized perpendicular to it. Light polarized in the plane is said to be ''p''-polarized, while that polarized perpendicular to it is ''s''-polarized. At a special angle known as [[Brewster's angle]], no ''p''-polarized light is reflected from the surface, thus all reflected light must be ''s''-polarized, with an electric field perpendicular to the plane of incidence.
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| A simple linear polarizer can be made by tilting a stack of glass plates at Brewster's angle to the beam. Some of the ''s''-polarized light is reflected from each surface of each plate. For a stack of plates, each reflection depletes the incident beam of ''s''-polarized light, leaving a greater fraction of ''p''-polarized light in the transmitted beam at each stage. For visible light in air and typical glass, Brewster's angle is about 57°, and about 16% of the ''s''-polarized light present in the beam is reflected for each air-to-glass or glass-to-air transition. It takes many plates to achieve even mediocre polarization of the transmitted beam with this approach. For a stack of 10 plates (20 reflections), about 3% (= (1-0.16)<sup>20</sup>) of the ''s''-polarized light is transmitted. The reflected beam, while fully polarized, is spread out and may not be very useful.
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| A more useful polarized beam can be obtained by tilting the pile of plates at a steeper angle to the incident beam. Counterintuitively, using incident angles greater than Brewster's angle yields a higher degree of polarization of the ''transmitted'' beam, at the expense of decreased overall transmission. For angles of incidence steeper than 80° the polarization of the transmitted beam can approach 100% with as few as four plates, although the transmitted intensity is very low in this case.<ref>Collett, Edward. ''Field Guide to Polarization'', SPIE Field Guides vol. '''FG05''', SPIE (2005) ISBN 0-8194-5868-6.</ref> Adding more plates and reducing the angle allows a better compromise between transmission and polarization to be achieved.
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| ==== Birefringent polarizers ====
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| Other linear polarizers exploit the [[birefringence|birefringent]] properties of crystals such as [[quartz]] and [[calcite]]. In these crystals, a beam of unpolarized light incident on their surface is split by [[refraction]] into two rays. [[Snell's law]] holds for one of these rays, the ''ordinary'' or ''o''-ray, but not for the other, the ''extraordinary'' or ''e''-ray. In general the two rays will be in different polarization states, though not in linear polarization states except for certain propagation directions relative to the crystal axis. The two rays also experience differing [[refractive index|refractive indices]] in the crystal.
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| [[Image:Nicol-prism.png|right|thumb|250px|A Nicol prism]]
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| A [[Nicol prism]] was an early type of birefringent polarizer, that consists of a crystal of calcite which has been split and rejoined with [[Canada balsam]]. The crystal is cut such that the ''o''- and ''e''-rays are in orthogonal linear polarization states. [[Total internal reflection]] of the ''o''-ray occurs at the balsam interface, since it experiences a larger refractive index in calcite than in the balsam, and the ray is deflected to the side of the crystal. The ''e''-ray, which sees a smaller refractive index in the calcite, is transmitted through the interface without deflection. Nicol prisms produce a very high purity of polarized light, and were extensively used in [[microscopy]], though in modern use they have been mostly replaced with alternatives such as the [[Glan–Thompson prism]], [[Glan–Foucault prism]], and [[Glan–Taylor prism]]. These prisms are not true polarizing beamsplitters since only the transmitted beam is fully polarized.
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| [[Image:Wollaston-prism.svg|thumb|right|A Wollaston prism]]
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| A [[Wollaston prism]] is another birefringent polarizer consisting of two triangular calcite prisms with orthogonal crystal axes that are cemented together. At the internal interface, an unpolarized beam splits into two linearly polarized rays which leave the prism at a divergence angle of 15°–45°. The [[Rochon prism|Rochon]] and [[Sénarmont prism|Sénarmont]] prisms are similar, but use different optical axis orientations in the two prisms. The Sénarmont prism is air spaced, unlike the Wollaston and Rochon prisms. These prisms truly split the beam into two fully polarized beams with perpendicular polarizations. The [[Nomarski prism]] is a variant of the Wollaston prism, which is widely used in [[differential interference contrast microscopy]].
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| ==== Thin film polarizers ====
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| [[Thin-film optics|Thin-film]] linear polarizers are glass substrates on which a special [[optical coating]] is applied. [[Interference (wave propagation)|Interference]] effects in the film cause them to act as beam-splitting polarizers. The substrate for the film can either be a plate, which is inserted into the beam at a particular angle, or a wedge of glass that is cemented to a second wedge to form a cube with the film cutting diagonally across the center.
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| Thin-film polarizers generally do not perform as well as Glan-type polarizers, but they are inexpensive and provide two beams that are about equally well polarized. The cube-type polarizers generally perform better than the plate polarizers. The former are easily confused with Glan-type birefringent polarizers.
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| === Malus' law and other properties ===
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| [[Image:Malus law.svg|right|thumb|350px|Polarization of light.<br>In this picture, ''θ''<sub>1</sub> − ''θ<sub>0</sub>'' = ''θ<sub>i</sub>''.]]
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| '''Malus' law''', which is named after [[Étienne-Louis Malus]], says that when a perfect polarizer is placed in a polarized beam of light, the intensity, ''I'', of the light that passes through is given by
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| :<math> I = I_0 \cos^2 \theta_i \quad ,</math>
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| where
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| : ''I''<sub>0</sub> is the initial intensity,
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| : and ''θ<sub>i</sub>'' is the angle between the light's initial polarization direction and the axis of the polarizer.
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| A beam of unpolarized light can be thought of as containing a uniform mixture of linear polarizations at all possible angles. Since the average value of <math>\cos^2 \theta</math> is 1/2, the transmission coefficient becomes
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| :<math> \frac {I}{I_0} = \frac {1}{2}\quad .</math>
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| In practice, some light is lost in the polarizer and the actual transmission of unpolarized light will be somewhat lower than this, around 38% for Polaroid-type polarizers but considerably higher (>49.9%) for some birefringent prism types.
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| If two polarizers are placed one after another (the second polarizer is generally called an ''analyzer''), the mutual angle between their polarizing axes gives the value of θ in Malus' law. If the two axes are orthogonal, the polarizers are ''crossed'' and in theory no light is transmitted, though again practically speaking no polarizer is perfect and the transmission is not exactly zero (for example, crossed Polaroid sheets appear slightly blue in colour). If a transparent object is placed between the crossed polarizers, any polarization effects present in the sample (such as birefringence) will be shown as an increase in transmission. This effect is used in [[polarimetry]] to measure the [[optical activity]] of a sample.
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| Real polarizers are also not perfect blockers of the polarization orthogonal to their polarization axis; the ratio of the transmission of the unwanted component to the wanted component is called the ''[[extinction ratio]]'', and varies from around 1:500 for Polaroid to about 1:10<sup>6</sup> for [[Glan–Taylor prism]] polarizers.
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| In [[X-ray]] the Malus’ law ([[Theory of relativity|relativistic]] form):
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| : <math>I=I_{0}\frac{f}f_0\left[1+\frac{\lambda(f_0-f)}{2c}\right]\cos^2\theta_i\; </math>
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| where <math> f_0 </math> - frequency of the polarized radiation falling on the polarizer, <math> f </math> - frequency of the radiation passes through polarizer, <math> \lambda </math> - [[Compton wavelength]] of electron, <math> c </math> - [[speed of light]] in vacuum.<ref name=Volobuev>{{cite book | author=A. N. Volobuev| title=Interaction of the Electromagnetic Field with Substance| publisher=Nova Science Publishers, Inc. New York | year=2013 | isbn=978-1-62618-348-3}}</ref>
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| == Circular polarizers ==
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| '''Circular polarizers''', also referred to as '''circular polarizing filters''', can be used to create [[circularly polarized]] light or alternatively to selectively absorb or pass clockwise and counter-clockwise circularly [[Polarization (waves)|polarized]] light.
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| They are used as [[Polarizing filters (Photography)|polarizing filters in photography]] to reduce oblique reflections from non-metallic surfaces, and are the lenses of the [[Polarized 3D glasses|3D glasses]] worn for the viewing of [[stereoscopic]] movies that use different directions of polarization to differentiate the images to be presented to the left and right eye.
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| === Creating circularly polarized light ===
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Circular.Polarizer Creating.Left.Handed.Helix.View.svg|thumb|660px|center|Alt=Image is well described in article| Circular polarizer creating left-handed circularly polarized light. It is considered left-handed as viewed from the receiver and right-handed as viewed from the source.<ref name=handedness/>]]
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| <!-- Note to Wikipedia editors: It is appreciated that this circular polarizer section is wordier than most articles on Wikipedia but with the advent of 3D cinemas using circular polarization now, the subject of how the glasses work is of interest to many people who don’t have a physics background. -->
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| <br style="clear:both" />
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| There are several ways to create circularly polarized light, the cheapest and most common involves placing a [[Waveplate#Quarter-wave plate|quarter-wave plate]] after a [[polarizer#Linear polarizers|linear polarizer]] and directing [[Polarization (waves)#Unpolarized light|unpolarized light]] through the linear polarizer. The linearly polarized light leaving the linear polarizer is transformed into circularly polarized light by the quarter wave plate.
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| The transmission axis of the linear polarizer needs to be half way (45°) between the fast and slow axes of the quarter-wave plate.<br/>
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| In the arrangement above, the transmission axis of the linear polarizer is at a positive 45° angle relative to the right horizontal and is represented with an orange line. The quarter-wave plate has a horizontal slow axis and a vertical fast axis and they are also represented using orange lines. In this instance the unpolarized light entering the linear polarizer is displayed as a single wave whose [[amplitude]] and angle of linear polarization are suddenly changing.<br/>
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| When one attempts to pass unpolarized light through the linear polarizer, only light that has its [[electric field]] at the positive 45° angle leaves the linear polarizer and enters the quarter-wave plate. In the illustration, the three wavelengths of unpolarized light represented would be transformed into the three wavelengths of linearly polarized light on the other side of the linear polarizer.
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Linear Polarized Light Entering.Quarter.Wave.Plate Components.svg|thumb|430px|alt=Three vertical sin waves| Linearly polarized light, represented using components, entering a quarter-wave plate. The blue and green curves are projections of the red line on the vertical and horizontal planes respectively.]]
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| In the illustration toward the right is the electric field of the linearly polarized light just before it enters the quarter-wave plate. The red line and associated field [[Euclidean vector|vectors]] represent how the magnitude and direction of the electric field varies along the direction of travel. For this plane electromagnetic wave, each vector represents the magnitude and direction of the electric field for an entire plane that is perpendicular to the direction of travel. Refer to [[Plane wave#Polarized electromagnetic plane waves|these two images]] in the plane wave article to better appreciate this.<br> Light and all other [[electromagnetic radiation|electromagnetic waves]] have a [[magnetic field]] which is in [[Phase (waves)|phase]] with, and perpendicular to, the electric field being displayed in these illustrations. <br/>
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| To understand the effect the quarter-wave plate has on the linearly polarized light it is useful think of the light as being divided into two [[Euclidean vector#Vector components|components]] which are at right angles ([[orthogonality|orthogonal]]) to each other. Towards this end, the blue and green lines are projections of the red line onto the vertical and horizontal planes respectively and represent how the electric field changes in the direction of those two planes. The two components have the same amplitude and are in phase.<br/>
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| Because the quarter-wave plate is made of a [[Birefringence|birefringent]] material, when in the wave plate, the light travels at different speeds depending on the direction of its electric field. This means that the horizontal component which is along the slow axis of the wave plate will travel at a slower speed than the component that is directed along the vertical fast axis. Initially the two components are in phase, but as the two components travel through the wave plate the horizontal component of the light drifts farther behind that of the vertical. By adjusting the thickness of the wave plate one can control how much the horizontal component is delayed relative to vertical component before the light leaves the wave plate and they begin again to travel at the same speed. When the light leaves the quarter-wave plate the rightward horizontal component will be exactly one quarter of a [[wavelength]] behind the vertical component making the light left-hand circularly polarized when viewed from the receiver.<ref name=handedness/>
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light And.Linearly.Polarized.Light.Comparison.svg|thumb|430px|The top image is left-handed/counter-clockwise circularly polarized, as viewed from the receiver.<ref name=handedness/> The bottom image is that of linearly polarized light. The blue and green curves are projections of the red lines on the vertical and horizontal planes respectively.]]
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| At the top of the illustration toward the right, is the [[Circular polarization|circularly polarized light]] after it leaves the wave plate, and again directly below it, for comparison purposes, the linearly polarized light that entered the quarter-wave plate. In the upper image, because this is a plane wave, each vector leading from the axis to the helix represents the magnitude and direction of the electric field for an entire plane that is perpendicular to the direction of travel. All the electric field vectors have the same magnitude indicating that the strength of the electric field does not change. The direction of the electric field however steadily rotates.<br/>
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| The blue and green lines are projections of the helix onto the vertical and horizontal planes respectively and represent how the electric field changes in the direction of those two planes. Notice how the rightward horizontal component is now one quarter of a wavelength behind the vertical component. It is this quarter of a wavelength phase shift that results in the rotational nature of the electric field. It is significant to note that when the magnitude of one component is at a maximum the magnitude of the other component is always zero. This is the reason that there are helix vectors which exactly correspond to the maxima of the two components.
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Left.Hand.Animation.305x190.255Colors.gif|thumb|305px|Animation of left-handed/counter-clockwise circularly polarized light. (Left-handed as viewed from the receiver.<ref name=handedness/>)]]
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| In the instance just cited, using the [[Circular polarization#Left.2Fright handedness conventions|handedness convention]] used in many optics textbooks, the light is considered left-handed/counter-clockwise circularly polarized. Referring to the accompanying animation, it is considered left-handed because if one points one’s left thumb ''against'' the direction of travel, ones fingers curl in the direction the electric field rotates as the wave passes a given point in space. The helix also forms a left-handed helix in space. Similarly this light is considered counter-clockwise circularly polarized because if a stationary observer faces ''against'' the direction of travel, the person will observe its electric field rotate in the counter-clockwise direction as the wave passes a given point in space.<ref name=handedness>Refer to well referenced section in Circular Polarization article for a discussion of handedness. [[Circular polarization#Left/Right|Left/Right Handedness]]</ref>
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| To create right-handed, clockwise circularly polarized light one simply rotates the axis of the quarter-wave plate 90° relative to the linear polarizer. This reverses the fast and slow axes of the wave plate relative to the transmission axis of the linear polarizer reversing which component leads and which component lags.
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| In trying to appreciate how the quarter-wave plate transforms the linearly polarized light, it is important to realize that the two components discussed are not entities in and of themselves but are merely mental constructs one uses to help appreciate what is happening. In the case of linearly and circularly polarized light, at each point in space, there is always a single electric field with a distinct vector direction, the quarter-wave plate merely has the effect of transforming this single electric field.
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| === Absorbing and passing circularly polarized light ===
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| Circular polarizers can also be used to selectively absorb or pass right-handed or left-handed circularly polarized light. It is this feature which is utilized by the 3D glasses in stereoscopic cinemas such as [[RealD Cinema]]. A given polarizer which creates one of the two polarizations of light will pass that same polarization of light when that light is sent through it in the other direction. In contrast it will block light of the opposite polarization.
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Circular.Polarizer Passing.Left.Handed.Helix.View.svg|thumb|660px|center| Circular polarizer passing left-handed, counter-clockwise circularly polarized light. (Left-handed as viewed from the receiver.)<ref name=handedness/>]]
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| The illustration above is identical to the previous similar one with the exception that the left-handed circularly polarized light is now approaching the polarizer from the opposite direction and linearly polarized light is exiting the polarizer toward the right.<br/>
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| First note that a quarter-wave plate always transforms circularly polarized light into linearly polarized light. It is only the resulting angle of polarization of the linearly polarized light that is determined by the orientation of the fast and slow axes of the quarter-wave plate and the handedness of the circularly polarized light. In the illustration, the left-handed circularly polarized light entering the polarizer is transformed into linearly polarized light which has its direction of polarization along the transmission axis of the linear polarizer and it therefore passes. In contrast right-handed circularly polarized light would have been transformed into linearly polarized light that had its direction of polarization along the absorbing axis of the linear polarizer, which is at right angles to the transmission axis, and it would have therefore been blocked.
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light And.Linearly.Polarized.Light.Comparison.svg|thumb|430px|Left-handed/Counter-Clockwise circularly polarized light displayed above linearly polarized light.<ref name=handedness/> The blue and green curves are projections of the helix on the vertical and horizontal planes respectively.]]
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| To understand this process, refer to the illustration on the right. It is absolutely identical to the earlier illustration even though the circularly polarized light at the top is now considered to be approaching the polarizer from the left. One can observe from the illustration that the leftward horizontal (as observed looking along the direction of travel) component is leading the vertical component and that when the horizontal component is retarded by one quarter of a wavelength it will be transformed into the linearly polarized light illustrated at the bottom and it will pass through the linear polarizer.
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| There is a relatively straightforward way to appreciate why a polarizer which creates a given handedness of circularly polarized light also passes that same handedness of polarized light. First, given the dual usefulness of this image, begin by imagining the circularly polarized light displayed at the top as still leaving the quarter-wave plate and traveling toward the left. Observe that had the horizontal component of the linearly polarized light been retarded by a quarter of wavelength twice, which would amount to a full half wavelength, the result would have been linearly polarized light that was at a right angle to the light that entered. If such orthogonally polarized light were rotated on the horizontal plane and directed back through the linear polarizer section of the circular polarizer it would clearly pass through given its orientation. Now imagine the circularly polarized light which has already passed through the quarter-wave plate once, turned around and directed back toward the circular polarizer again. Let the circularly polarized light illustrated at the top now represent that light. Such light is going to travel through the quarter-wave plate a second time before reaching the linear polarizer and in the process, its horizontal component is going to be retarded a second time by one quarter of a wavelength. Whether that horizontal component is retarded by one quarter of a wavelength in two distinct steps or retarded a full half wavelength all at once, the orientation of the resulting linearly polarized light will be such that it passes through the linear polarizer.
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| Had it been right-handed, clockwise circularly polarized light approaching the circular polarizer from the left, its horizontal component would have also been retarded, however the resulting linearly polarized light would have been polarized along the absorbing axis of the linear polarizer and it would not have passed.
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| To create a circular polarizer that instead passes right-handed polarized light and absorbs left-handed light, one again rotates the wave plate and linear polarizer 90° relative to each another. It is easy to appreciate that by reversing the positions of the transmitting and absorbing axes of the linear polarizer relative to the quarter-wave plate, one changes which handedness of polarized light gets transmitted and which gets absorbed.
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| === Homogenous circular polarizer ===
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| [[Image:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Homogenous Circular.Polarizer Left.Handed.svg|thumb|660px|center|Homogeneous circular polarizer passing left-handed, counter-clockwise circularly polarized light. (Left-handed as viewed from the receiver.)<ref name=handedness/>]]
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| A homogenous circular polarizer passes one handedness of circular polarization unaltered and blocks the other handedness. This is similar to the way that a linear polarizer would fully pass one angle of linearly polarized light unaltered, but would fully block any linearly polarized light that was orthogonal to it.
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| A homogenous circular polarizer can be created by sandwiching a linear polarizer between two quarter-wave plates.<ref name="Handbook of Optics V2 Ch22.19">Bass M (1995) [http://cdn.preterhuman.net/texts/science_and_technology/physics/Optics/Handbook%20of%20Optics%20%20second%20edition%20vol.%202%20-%20Bass%20M.pdf ''Handbook of Optics''], Second edition, Vol. 2, Ch. 22.19, McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-07-047974-7</ref> Specifically we take the circular polarizer described previously, which transforms circularly polarized light into linear polarized light, and add to it a second quarter-wave plate rotated 90° relative to the first one.
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| Generally speaking, and not making direct reference to the above illustration, when either of the two polarizations of circularly polarized light enters the first quarter-wave plate, one of a pair of orthogonal components is retarded by one quarter of a wavelength relative to the other. This creates one of two linear polarizations depending on the handedness the circularly polarized light. The linear polarizer sandwiched between the quarter wave plates is oriented so that it will pass one linear polarization and block the other. The second quarter-wave plate then takes the linearly polarized light that passes and retards the orthogonal component that was not retarded by the previous quarter-wave plate. This brings the two components back into their initial phase relationship, reestablishing the selected circular polarization. <br>
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| Note that it does not matter in which direction one passes the circularly polarized light.
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| == See also ==
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| {{Commons category|Polarization}}
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| ; Related to circular polarizers
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| * [[Polarization (waves)|Polarization]]
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| * [[Circular polarization]]
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| * [[Linear polarization]]
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| * [[Linear polarizer]]
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| * [[Wave plate]]
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| * [[Photoelastic modulator]] - a wave plate that can rapidly switch fast and slow axes, and thus produce rapidly alternating left and right circular polarization. They commonly operate in the ultrasonic range.
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| * [[Electromagnetic waves]]
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| * [[3D Glasses]]
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| * [[RealD cinema]]
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| * [[Polarizing filter (photography)]]
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| * [[Fresnel rhomb]] - another way of producing circularly polarized light; it does not use a wave plate
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| ; Other
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| * [[Extinction cross]]
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| * [[Photographic filter]]
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| * [[Polarization (waves)#Parameterization|Poincaré sphere]]
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| * [[Edwin Land]]
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| * [[Polariscope]]
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| * [[Polarized light microscope]]
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| == References ==
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| {{reflist}}
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| ==Further reading==
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| * Kliger, David S. ''Polarized Light in Optics and Spectroscopy'', Academic Press (1990) ISBN 0-12-414975-8
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| * Mann, James "Austine Wood Comarow: Paintings in Polarized Light", Wasabi Publishing (2005) ISBN 978-0976819806
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| [[Category:Optical devices]]
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| [[Category:Polarization (waves)]]
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