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What is Polarisation?
Polarisation is the phenomenon by which the vibrations of a transverse wave are restricted to a single plane. In the case of light, polarisation means the electric field vector vibrates only in one direction (one plane) instead of all possible planes perpendicular to the direction of propagation.
Unpolarised Light
Ordinary light (from the sun, a bulb, or a candle) is unpolarised. In unpolarised light, the electric field vector vibrates in all possible planes perpendicular to the direction of propagation with equal probability. The vibrations are symmetrically distributed in all directions.
Plane Polarised Light
Plane polarised light (or linearly polarised light) has the electric field vector vibrating in only one plane containing the direction of propagation. It is obtained by passing unpolarised light through a polaroid, Nicol prism, or by reflection at Brewster angle.
Fig. 1 — Pictorial representation of (a) unpolarised light and (b) plane polarised light (similar to NCERT Fig. 10.34)
Why Only Transverse Waves Can Be Polarised
Polarisation is possible only for transverse waves because in transverse waves, the displacement (electric field for light) is perpendicular to the direction of propagation and can be restricted to one plane. In longitudinal waves (like sound), the vibrations are along the direction of propagation — there is no perpendicular plane to restrict, so they cannot be polarised.
Sound waves (longitudinal) cannot be polarised.
Light waves (transverse) can be polarised. ✓
Light is an electromagnetic transverse wave. It consists of oscillating electric field E and magnetic field B, both perpendicular to each other and to the direction of propagation.
Fig. 2 — Light is a transverse EM wave. Electric field E (red) and magnetic field B (blue) oscillate perpendicular to the direction of propagation (x-axis).
- The electric field E vibrates in a plane perpendicular to the direction of propagation
- The magnetic field B vibrates perpendicular to both E and the direction of propagation
- Since the vibrations are transverse, light can be polarised
- Sound waves are longitudinal — they cannot be polarised
Polaroid
A polaroid is a thin plastic sheet that transmits light vibrations parallel to its transmission axis and absorbs vibrations perpendicular to it. When unpolarised light passes through a polaroid, it emerges as plane polarised light.
Nicol Prism
A Nicol prism is made from calcite crystal (Iceland spar) and uses double refraction (birefringence) to separate the ordinary ray (blocked by total internal reflection at the Canada balsam layer) from the extraordinary ray, producing plane polarised light.
Polariser and Analyser
The first polaroid that converts unpolarised light to plane polarised is called the Polariser (P). The second polaroid used to detect or analyse the polarised light is called the Analyser (A).
Top: P and A parallel → maximum intensity. Bottom: P and A crossed (perpendicular) → no light transmitted.
Statement
When plane polarised light of intensity I₀ is incident on an analyser, the intensity of transmitted light is:
This law was discovered by French engineer Étienne-Louis Malus in 1809.
Derivation Using Amplitude
The amplitude a₀ of polarised light resolves into a₀cosθ (along analyser axis, transmitted) and a₀sinθ (perpendicular, absorbed).
Transmitted amplitude a = a₀ cosθ
Intensity of Unpolarised Light Through a Polariser
Graph of I vs θ (Malus Law)
I = I₀ at θ = 0°, 180°, 360° (parallel); I = 0 at θ = 90°, 270° (crossed)
| θ (angle) | cosθ | cos²θ | Intensity I | Observation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0° | 1 | 1 | I₀ | Maximum (bright) |
| 45° | 1/√2 | 1/2 | I₀/2 | Half maximum |
| 60° | 1/2 | 1/4 | I₀/4 | Quarter maximum |
| 90° | 0 | 0 | 0 | Minimum (dark) |
| 180° | −1 | 1 | I₀ | Maximum again |
Statement
When unpolarised light is incident on a transparent surface at a specific angle called the polarising angle (or Brewster angle) iₚ, the reflected light is completely plane polarised (vibrations only perpendicular to the plane of incidence). The refracted ray is only partially polarised.
Derivation
iₚ + r = 90°, so r = 90° − iₚ
At Brewster angle iₚ: reflected ray is completely plane polarised, refracted ray is partially polarised. iₚ + r = 90°.
Important Points about Brewster Law
- The polarising angle for glass (μ = 1.5) is about 56°
- The polarising angle for water (μ = 1.33) is about 53°
- At Brewster angle: reflected ray ⊥ refracted ray (angle = 90°)
- The reflected beam is 100% polarised; the refracted beam is only partially polarised
- iₚ is different for different materials (depends on μ)
iₚ + r = 90° (at Brewster angle)
Reflected light → completely plane polarised
Refracted light → partially polarised
When unpolarised light reflects from a flat surface (glass, water, road), the reflected beam is partially or completely polarised depending on the angle of incidence. At the Brewster angle, the reflected beam is completely plane polarised with the electric field vibrating perpendicular to the plane of incidence.
Examples of Polarisation by Reflection
- Glare from roads: Sunlight reflects from wet roads at near-Brewster angle → horizontally polarised glare
- Glare from water: Light reflected from lakes and rivers is strongly polarised
- Glare from glass windows: Reflected light is partially polarised
- Photography: Photographers use polarising filters to reduce glare from glass and water surfaces
Degree of Polarisation
At angles other than Brewster angle, the reflected beam is only partially polarised. The degree of polarisation (ratio of polarised to total intensity) is maximum at the Brewster angle.
When sunlight (unpolarised) falls on molecules of the atmosphere, the light is scattered in all directions (Rayleigh scattering). The scattered light is partially polarised.
Mechanism
The oscillating electric field of sunlight forces atmospheric molecules to vibrate and re-radiate (scatter) light. Since molecules are transverse oscillators, they cannot radiate along the direction of their vibration. As a result, light scattered at 90° to the incident beam is completely plane polarised.
Why is the Sky Blue?
Rayleigh scattering intensity ∝ 1/λ⁴. Shorter wavelengths (blue) are scattered much more strongly than longer wavelengths (red). So the sky appears blue during the day. At sunrise/sunset, light travels through more atmosphere, so more blue is scattered away and the remaining light appears red/orange.
Polaroid Sunglasses and Scattering
Looking at the sky through a rotating polaroid, one observes changes in intensity — confirming that skylight is partially polarised by scattering.
| Application | How Polarisation is Used |
|---|---|
| Polaroid Sunglasses | Vertical transmission axis blocks horizontally polarised glare from road/water surfaces. Reduces eye strain and improves visibility. |
| LCD Displays | Liquid Crystal Displays use two crossed polaroids with liquid crystal between them. Voltage controls crystal orientation → controls light transmission → forms images. Found in calculators, phone screens, TV monitors. |
| Camera Filters (CPL) | Circular polarising filters reduce reflections from glass and water, improve sky contrast, and saturate colours in photography. |
| 3D Movies | Two projectors show slightly different images using perpendicularly polarised light. Audience wears polaroid glasses that let each eye see only its image, creating depth perception. |
| Stress Analysis | Transparent plastic models placed between crossed polaroids show colourful stress patterns (photoelasticity) — used in engineering to find stress concentration in designs. |
| Glare Reduction | Polaroid windshields and visors reduce glare for pilots and drivers, improving road safety. |
| Optical Instruments | Polarimeters measure the rotation of polarised light by optically active substances (sugars, amino acids) — used in sugar industry and pharmacy. |
| Microscopy | Polarising microscopes reveal crystal structures, biological specimens, and minerals invisible in ordinary light. |
LCD Display — How it Works
- Light passes through first polaroid (Polariser P) — becomes linearly polarised
- Liquid crystal layer rotates the plane of polarisation by 90° when no voltage
- Rotated light passes through second crossed polaroid (Analyser A) — screen bright (ON state)
- When voltage applied — crystal aligns, does not rotate polarisation — light blocked by analyser — dark pixel (OFF state)
- Varying voltage controls intermediate brightness — millions of pixels form an image
Part A: Malus Law Problems
After second polaroid (Malus): I₂ = I₁cos²45° = (I₀/2)(1/√2)² = (I₀/2)(1/2) = I₀/4
After P₂ (at 45° to P₁): I₂ = (I₀/2)cos²45° = I₀/4
After P₃ (at 45° to P₂ = 90° to P₁): I₃ = (I₀/4)cos²45° = I₀/8 = I₀/8
After P₃ at θ: I₂ = (I₀/2)cos²θ
After P₂ at 0° (= parallel to P₁; angle (0−θ) from P₃): I₃ = I₂ cos²θ = (I₀/2)cos⁴θ
Using cos⁴θ = ((1+cos2θ)/2)² = (1 + 2cos2θ + cos²2θ)/4 = (3 + 4cos2θ + cos4θ)/8
∴ I₃ = (I₀/2)(3+4cos2θ+cos4θ)/8 — [complex result; for the special simplified form, the final answer uses: I = (I₀/8)(1+cos4θ) when both outer polaroids are parallel]
Part B: Brewster Law Problems
tan iₚ = √2 → iₚ = tan⁻¹(√2) = 54.74° ≈ 55°
(b) r = 90° − 55.6° = 34.4°
Part C: Multiple Polaroids and Intensity
After P₂: 5×(3/4) = 3.75. After P₃: 3.75×(3/4) = 2.8125. After P₄: 2.8125×(3/4) = 2.109 W/m²
Derivation: At iₚ, reflected ⊥ refracted. r = 90°−iₚ. By Snell: μ = siniₚ/sinr = siniₚ/cosi ₚ = taniₚ.
μ = tan 60° = √3 ≈ 1.732
CBSE Board PYQs
NEET PYQs
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JEE Advanced PYQs
IB Physics Questions
IGCSE Questions
A-Level Questions
Assertion–Reason Questions
Case Study Questions
Passage: Polaroid sunglasses use sheets of oriented polymer molecules. When driving, glare from wet roads is strongly polarised.
Q1: Why is road glare polarised?
Ans: Reflection at near-Brewster angle from flat water/road surface preferentially reflects s-polarised (horizontal) light.
Q2: Which direction should the polaroid axis of sunglasses be?
Ans: Vertical — to block horizontal glare.
Q3: If a driver tilts head 90°, what happens?
Ans: The formerly blocked horizontal glare now passes through → glare returns.
Q4: How much does a single polaroid reduce unpolarised light?
Ans: By 50% (I = I₀/2).
Passage: A liquid crystal display uses two crossed polaroids with a liquid crystal layer between them. The liquid crystal naturally rotates polarisation by 90°.
Q1: Why is the screen bright when no voltage is applied?
Ans: LC rotates polarisation 90° → aligned with analyser → passes through → bright.
Q2: When voltage is applied, what happens?
Ans: LC aligns with electric field and does not rotate polarisation → blocked by crossed analyser → dark pixel.
Q3: Can an LCD work without polaroids?
Ans: No — polaroids are essential. Without them, there would be no intensity modulation.
Passage: Two slightly different images of a scene (left-eye and right-eye views) are projected using perpendicularly polarised light (0° and 90°). Audience wears polaroid glasses with corresponding axes.
Q1: How does each eye receive a separate image?
Ans: Left lens passes 0°-polarised light; right lens passes 90°-polarised. Each eye sees only its image.
Q2: What would happen if you turned your head 90°?
Ans: The eyes would receive opposite images → reversed depth perception, disorienting effect.
Q3: Why must circular polarisation be used in modern cinemas?
Ans: Linear polarisation fails if viewer tilts head. Circular polarisation preserves the image assignment regardless of head tilt.
| Formula | Name | Key Condition / Note |
|---|---|---|
| I = I₀ cos²θ | Malus Law | Polarised light through analyser at angle θ |
| I = I₀/2 | First polaroid | Unpolarised → polaroid → half intensity |
| a = a₀ cosθ | Amplitude (Malus) | Transmitted amplitude along analyser axis |
| μ = tan iₚ | Brewster's Law | μ = refractive index, iₚ = polarising angle |
| iₚ + r = 90° | Brewster condition | Reflected ⊥ refracted at polarising angle |
| I_max = I₀ (θ=0°) | Parallel polaroids | Maximum intensity when axes parallel |
| I_min = 0 (θ=90°) | Crossed polaroids | Zero intensity when axes perpendicular |
| I = I₀ cos⁴θ | Three polaroids | Unpolarised → P₁ → P₂(θ) → P₃(2θ... or parallel pattern) |
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