How does a polarising filter work?

In summary: Summary: In summary, there are several fundamentally different kinds of polarizers, their construction depends on the wavelength of radiation in question, and they can be either lossy or non-lossy.
  • #1
cmb
1,128
128
Being an old school Newtonian engineering type, I have a model of a polarising filter that generally works for day to day stuff like taking photos, explaining sun glasses etc..

But it is clearly wrong.

Given that opening remark, the 'A' index, and the forum subject area, I trust you will understand I want a bit more of a fundamental discussion on this. Please can anyone give it a go? Personally I think it is going to get tricky, but maybe I am seeing problems where there are simple answers?

... or maybe polarising filters really are too complicated for us to explain at the moment?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
cmb said:
Being an old school Newtonian engineering type, I have a model of a polarising filter that generally works for day to day stuff like taking photos, explaining sun glasses etc..

But it is clearly wrong.

Given that opening remark, the 'A' index, and the forum subject area, I trust you will understand I want a bit more of a fundamental discussion on this. Please can anyone give it a go? Personally I think it is going to get tricky, but maybe I am seeing problems where there are simple answers?

... or maybe polarising filters really are too complicated for us to explain at the moment?
Here is a start: There are several fundamentally different kinds of polarizers. In addition their exact construction depends upon the wavelength (or frequency if you prefer) of the radiation in question.
  1. Sometimes the radiation is polarized by orienting the emitters. For instance a dipole antenna will emit linearly polarized radiation.
  2. The most common "filters" look like "combs" that absorb preferentially because they conduct and dissipate along the teeth of the comb. These could be parallel aluminum rods or metal deposited on glass or long molecules oriented in a matrix again depending upon wavelength
  3. Reflection from a surface will also polarize
This is a very big and useful subject and you can find lots of published sources. I will not attempt to reproduce them. If you have specific questions from your researches they should asked here
 
  • Like
Likes Klystron and atyy
  • #3
OK, well let's start with what process determines if a photon passes through the polarising filter or not? Or do no photons pass through and all are absorbed in which case which ones are re-radiated?

(I am assuming an 'optical' polarising filter, like sunglasses are, whatever they are)
 
  • #4
I think all of the stuff relating to polarizers is covered by Maxwell's Equations. As already mentioned by hutchphd there are many different kinds, but if you are comfortable with Maxwell's Equations then all of it is simple.

Pick a filter you like, e.g. https://www.thorlabs.com/navigation.cfm?guide_id=8 and then try to understand it. It will be much more easier to help with specific questions.
 
  • Like
Likes atyy
  • #5
Oh, you want photons. Well in this case have a look in Loudons "The Quantum Theory of Light". Basically you quantize the electromagnetic field, and get the electric and magnetic field operators. After that a lot of the treatment of filters is like in classical electrodynamics. It's the detection that is tricky
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71 and atyy
  • #6
In the simplest case you have electromagnetic field, quantized, before the filter and after the filter. So you may have a creation operator for the photon before the filter ##\hat{a}_{in,h}^\dagger##, ##\hat{a}_{in,v}^\dagger## and the boundary condition (matrix) that represents the filter which will tell you how these operators translate into the output field ##\hat{a}_{out,h}^\dagger##, ##\hat{a}_{out,v}^\dagger##. If the filter is lossy you will probably have to work with the density matrix rather than the pure states, though there are other ways, e.g. https://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.57.2134 .

Filters do not let or stop photons from passing. You have a quantum state of light which is affected by the filter, but nothing is determined until you get to the detection, at least in the standard interpretation.
 
  • Like
Likes atyy
  • #7
cmb said:
OK, well let's start with what process determines if a photon passes through the polarising filter or not? Or do no photons pass through and all are absorbed in which case which ones are re-radiated?
I should have said absorbed or scattered to be correct. Typically the scattering (or reradiation) is isotropic and hence lost from the beam direction.
 
  • #8
Cryo said:
In the simplest case you have electromagnetic field, quantized, before the filter and after the filter. So you may have a creation operator for the photon before the filter ##\hat{a}_{in,h}^\dagger##, ##\hat{a}_{in,v}^\dagger## and the boundary condition (matrix) that represents the filter which will tell you how these operators translate into the output field ##\hat{a}_{out,h}^\dagger##, ##\hat{a}_{out,v}^\dagger##. If the filter is lossy you will probably have to work with the density matrix rather than the pure states, though there are other ways, e.g. https://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.57.2134 .

Filters do not let or stop photons from passing. You have a quantum state of light which is affected by the filter, but nothing is determined until you get to the detection, at least in the standard interpretation.
This is in the right direction but far too complicated and also inspecific at the same time. I don't really know what that means, and don't think I need to either.

Say I buy a polarising filter from the camera shop. What is the ratio of light that will pass through it?

If I buy two of those filters and set them at an angle to each other, what is the ratio of light that passes then?
 
  • #9
  • #10
cmb said:
Given that opening remark, the 'A' index, and the forum subject area, I trust you will understand I want a bit more of a fundamental discussion on this. Please can anyone give it a go? Personally I think it is going to get tricky, but maybe I am seeing problems where there are simple answers?
Look at my Insight article for a simple introduction to some of the theory, and follow up with Wikipedia on the items menitioned there.

Cryo said:
Filters do not let or stop photons from passing. You have a quantum state of light which is affected by the filter, but nothing is determined until you get to the detection, at least in the standard interpretation.
That's not true. Filters reduce the intensity of light, which means only part of the light passes, the remainder heats up the filter and can in principle be measured. Thus (unlike a Stern-Gerlach magnet, which is unitary), a filter is always measuring.
Cryo said:
I think all of the stuff relating to polarizers is covered by Maxwell's Equations.
No. Maxwell's equations cover only fully polarized light. Unpolarized light and how to polarize it is not described by it.
 
  • Like
Likes RMedinaR
  • #11
A. Neumaier, I would be very glad to learn from you. Can you please clarify a couple of things?

A. Neumaier said:
That's not true. Filters reduce the intensity of light, which means only part of the light passes, the remainder heats up the filter and can in principle be measured. Thus (unlike a Stern-Gerlach magnet, which is unitary), a filter is always measuring.

In the reference I gave above, (Barnett, Jeffers, Gatti, Loudon, "Quantum optics of lossy beam splitters", Phys. Rev. A 57, 2134 (1998) ) they treat a lossy beam splitter. The loss in the beam splitter is treated by introducing a bath of quantum oscillators that can be used to dump the energy of the light into. Would the same formalism not account for response of a lossy polarizer? I understand that you would not get a pure state out of such a thing, but a mixed state may be ok too.

A. Neumaier said:
No. Maxwell's equations cover only fully polarized light. Unpolarized light and how to polarize it is not described by it.

What do you mean by unpolarized light? Classically unpolarized light is light with polarization that is changing randomly at the time-scale faster than your detector. Treatment of propagation of such light is the same as polarized light, but with arbitrary polarization. Extra care is needed when you detect this light, sure, but as far as I can see classical unpolarized light = Maxwell's equations + random variables describing polarization.

In a non-classical case, again, propagation of light, i.e. the bit that Maxwell's equation are needed for, is the same for any state - you simply specify the state (or the density matrix) and time-evolve the relevant operators.

Is there something I am missing?
 
Last edited:
  • #12
A. Neumaier said:
No. Maxwell's equations cover only fully polarized light. Unpolarized light and how to polarize it is not described by it.
But you can describe it with some statistics. Incoherent light can, e.g., be described by taking the intensity of coherent light and randomize phase differences. The same holds for polarization. So it's well possible to describe the optics of "natural light" within classical Maxwell theory.
 
  • Like
Likes Heikki Tuuri
  • #13
Cryo said:
In the reference I gave above, (Barnett, Jeffers, Gatti, Loudon, "Quantum optics of lossy beam splitters", Phys. Rev. A 57, 2134 (1998) ) they treat a lossy beam splitter. The loss in the beam splitter is treated by introducing a bath of quantum oscillators that can be used to dump the energy of the light into. Would the same formalism not account for response of a lossy polarizer? I understand that you would not get a pure state out of such a thing, but a mixed state may be ok too.
Any matter light goes through, acts as a filter and is slightly lossy, though this can be often neglected in simplified discussions. A polarizer is necessarily lossy (and not only slightly) when the input light is not of the polarization of the output, whereas it let's correctly polarized light through almost without loss.
Cryo said:
What do you mean by unpolarized light? Classically unpolarized light is light with polarization that is changing randomly at the time-scale faster than your detector. Treatment of propagation of such light is the same as polarized light, but with arbitrary polarization. Extra care is needed when you detect this light, sure, but as far as I can see classical unpolarized light = Maxwell's equations + random variables describing polarization.
So it is described by a stochastic version of the Maxwell equation, not by Maxwell's equation itself.
Cryo said:
Is there something I am missing?
If your usage of Maxwell's equations includes the stochastic case then nothing is missing.
vanhees71 said:
But you can describe it with some statistics. Incoherent light can, e.g., be described by taking the intensity of coherent light and randomize phase differences. The same holds for polarization. So it's well possible to describe the optics of "natural light" within classical Maxwell theory.
Stochastic Maxwell equations need much more complex mathematical machinery (of stochastic fields) than the ordinary Maxwell equations; hence I treat them as not the same.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71

1. How does a polarising filter work?

A polarising filter is a type of optical filter that blocks or transmits light waves based on their orientation. It works by allowing only light waves that are aligned in a specific direction to pass through, while blocking all other orientations of light.

2. What is the purpose of a polarising filter?

The main purpose of a polarising filter is to reduce glare and reflections from non-metallic surfaces, such as water, glass, and foliage. It can also enhance contrast and saturation in photographs by selectively filtering out certain wavelengths of light.

3. How is a polarising filter different from other types of filters?

A polarising filter is different from other types of filters, such as neutral density or color filters, because it only allows light waves of a specific orientation to pass through. This allows for more control over the quality and direction of light in a photograph.

4. Can a polarising filter be used with any type of camera?

Yes, a polarising filter can be used with any type of camera, as long as the camera has a filter thread or a lens hood that can hold the filter in place. However, the size of the filter may vary depending on the lens diameter of the camera.

5. Are there any drawbacks to using a polarising filter?

While polarising filters can greatly enhance the quality of photographs, there are some potential drawbacks. They can reduce the amount of light entering the camera, which may require longer exposure times or higher ISO settings. They can also cause uneven polarization and darkening of the sky in wide-angle shots.

Similar threads

  • Quantum Physics
Replies
8
Views
912
Replies
3
Views
795
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • General Engineering
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • Art, Music, History, and Linguistics
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
4
Views
3K
Replies
26
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
663
  • Mechanics
Replies
8
Views
1K
  • Programming and Computer Science
3
Replies
73
Views
4K
Back
Top