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Polarization
Polarization is an important optical property inherent in all laser beams. Brewster windows, reflective phase retarders, and absorbing thin-film reflectors use the advantage of polarization. On the other hand, it can cause troublesome and sometimes unpredictable results when ignored. Since virtually all laser sources exhibit some degree of polarization, understanding this effect is necessary in order to specify components properly. The following text gives a basic polarization definition and presents the polarization types most commonly encountered. |
![]() Figure 1 Definition of a polarization vector |
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Unpolarized light refers to a wave collection which has an equal distribution of electric field orientations for all directions. (Figure 2.) While each individual wavetrain may be linearly polarized, there’s no preferred direction of polarization when all the waves are averaged together. |
![]() Figure 2 Unpolarized light |
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Randomly polarized light is exactly what it says; the light is plane polarized, but the direction is unknown, and may vary with time. Random polarization causes problems in optical systems since some components are polarization sensitive. If the polarization state changes with time, then the components’ transmission, reflection, and/or absorption characteristics will also vary with time. |
![]() A wave is resolved into two equal components, each at 45° to the orginal (top). Introducing a quarter-wave phase difference between these components produces a result in a wave whose amplitude is constant (bottom), but whose polarization vector rotates. |
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When light strikes an optical surface, such as a beamsplitter, at a non-perpendicular angle, the reflection and transmission characteristics depend upon polarization. In this case, the coordinate system we use is defined by the plane containing the input and reflected beams. Light with a polarization vector lying in this plane is called p-polarized, and light, which is polarized perpendicular to this plane, is called s-polarized. Any arbitrary state of input polarization can be expressed as a vector sum of these s and p components. |
![]() For s-polarization, the input polarization is perpendicular to the plane (shown in color) containing the input and output beams. For p-polarization, the input polarization is parallel to the plane (shown in color) containing the input and output beams. |
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To understand the significance of s and p polarizations, examine the graph which shows the single surface reflectance as a function of angle of incidence for the s and p components of light at a wavelength of 10.6µm striking a ZnSe surface. Note that while the reflectance of the s component steadily increases with angle, the p component at first decreases to zero at 67° and then increases after that. The angle at which the p reflectance drops to zero is called Brewster’s Angle. This effect is exploited in several ways to produce polarizing components or uncoated windows which have no transmission loss such as the Brewster windows. |
![]() A graph of single surface reflectance for s- and p-polarization as a function of angle of incidence for ZnSe at 10.6µm. |
![]() Polarization state is particularly important in laser cutting applications. See our Beam Enhancement Systems which provide the optimum polarization for laser cutting. |
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References * II-IV Infrared Corp. |
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