Viewing A Sample With The Visible Polarizer; The Theory Of Light Polarization - PerkinElmer Spotlight 200 User Manual

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72 . Spotlight 200 User's Guide

Viewing a Sample with the Visible Polarizer

Polarized visible light can enable you to identify areas or structures that differ chemically and
to solve problems commonly found in infrared microspectroscopy applications.

The Theory of Light Polarization

Ordinary light and infrared radiation consists of waves vibrating in all possible planes
perpendicular to the direction of propagation. This is represented in the left side of Figure 23.
Conventionally the plane of the light is taken to be the plane of the continuously varying
electric vector.
If the light passes through a
that have their plane of vibration in one particular direction. The light that emerges is said to
polarized
be
, and is represented on the right side of Figure 23.
Figure 23 Representation of Unpolarized Light (left) and Polarized Light (right)
Because all components of the wave in the plane of polarization are transmitted, the ideal
polarizer allows 50% of the light through.
If a second polarizer is placed in the path of the polarized light, two things may result:
If the second polarizer is placed in the same direction as the first (as at the top of
Figure 24), the polarized light can pass straight through.
However, if the second polarizer is placed at a right angle to the first, a situation which
is referred to as crossed polarizers, the passage of the polarized light is blocked, that is,
extinction occurs (as at the bottom of Figure 24).
polarizer
, the polarizer allows the passage of only those waves

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