Question about wire-grid polarizers

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Wire-grid polarizers filter unpolarized light by allowing only electric fields aligned perpendicular to the wire to pass through, while absorbing or reflecting those aligned parallel. Diagonal waves can be resolved into horizontal and vertical components, meaning they will have both perpendicular and parallel elements. The perpendicular components of diagonal waves will pass through the polarizer, while the parallel components will be absorbed or reflected. This understanding clarifies how diagonal light interacts with wire-grid polarizers. The discussion emphasizes the importance of component resolution in understanding light behavior with polarizers.
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Hi, I'm new to this forum, and am not a genius in any way, so I hope you'll be patient with me.

I've been reading up on petrographic microscopes and understand that unpolarized light is filtered through a polarizer in order to get the EM wave electric fields to oscillate in the same direction. As the unpolarized light hits the wire-grid polarizer, those waves that are parallel with the metallic wire in the polarizer will be absorbed/reflected due to the electric fields interactions with the electrons in the wire. Those EM wave electric fields which are perpendicular to the direction of the wire-grid polarizer will be able to pass through it. My question is: What about those waves that are at a diagonal? Will they be able to pass through or not, and why? Every diagram that I have seen shows that ONLY the waves that are perpendicular to the direction of the wire-grid polarizer will pass through, and any deviation will result in those waves being absorbed/reflected.

If anyone can help me with this, it would be greatly appreciated!
 

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Please let me know if I'm even making sense!

:redface:
 
The diagonal waves are just made up of vertical and horizontal (or rather can be resolved into H+V)
A 45deg diagonal is equal H and V and so on.
 
I think I get it now. Their perpendicular components make it through, while their parallel components are absorbed/reflected.
 
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