Polarization and Poincare circle.

AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores the relationship between the Poincare Circle and the polarization of TEM waves, specifically how latitude and longitude on the sphere correspond to different polarization states. Linear polarization occurs at ε=0 degrees, while circular polarization is observed at ε=±45 degrees, with elliptical polarization arising at other values of ε. The right-hand (RH) and left-hand (LH) rotations are determined by the sign of ε, where positive values indicate LH rotation and negative values indicate RH rotation. The mapping of polarization states to the complex plane and the subsequent stereographic projection to the Poincare sphere is crucial for understanding these relationships. The conversation emphasizes the theoretical underpinnings and mathematical justification behind these polarization phenomena.
yungman
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What is the theory behind mapping of the latitude and longitude of the sphere in the Poincare Circle to the polarization of the TEM wave?

That is, why:

1) Linear polarization when ε=0 deg?
2) Circular polarization when ε=+/- 45 deg?
3) Elliptical when ε is not 0 or +/- 45 deg?
4) RH rotation if ε=-ve. and LH rotation if ε=+ve.?

Where 2ε= latitude.

Thanks

Alan
 
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The first step is to represent the polarization state by a complex number: the general elliptic state with azimuth θ and ellipticity ε is combined into χ= tan(ε +π/4)exp(-i*2θ.) This maps polarization states to the "cartesian complex plane", and recall that -π/2 ≤ θ < π/2 and -π/4 ≤ ε ≤ π/4. χ= 0 refers to left-circularly polarized light, χ=∞ is right-circularly polarized light.

To construct the Poincare sphere, perform a stereographic mapping of the plane to a unit sphere: latitudes on the sphere then correspond to circles of constant ε on the complex plane and longitude corresponds to lines of constant azimuth on the plane.

Azzam and Bashara's "Ellipsometry and Polarized Light" is an excellent resource for this material.
 
Thanks for your reply.

The book is way to expensive as This is only a small part of my study in antenna theory.

Can you show me how the polarity of the ellipticity angle relate to the direction of rotation? That is, why +ve ε gives rise to Left hand rotation and -ve ε gives rise to Right hand rotation.

Thanks
 
If I understand your question, it's a sign convention.
 
Andy Resnick said:
If I understand your question, it's a sign convention.

No so much about convention, but rather why ε affect the direction of rotation.

\epsilon=\frac {E_{max}}{E_{min}}

How do you justify +ve or -ve of E_{max},E_{min}?

Thanks
 
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