Polarization upon reflection?

jeudi 28 août 2014



Quote:








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



http://ift.tt/1gcAwYs





The dipoles that produce the transmitted (refracted) light oscillate in the polarization direction of that light. Why?



Does that last sentence actually say no light is reflected back if the angle of impact is orthogonal to the surface?





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