Fresnel–Arago laws

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The Fresnel–Arago laws are three laws which summarise some of the more important properties of interference between light of different states of polarization. Augustin-Jean Fresnel and François Arago, both discovered the laws, which bear their name.

Statement

The laws are as follows:[1]

  1. Two orthogonal, coherent linearly polarized waves cannot interfere.
  2. Two parallel coherent linearly polarized waves will interfere in the same way as natural light.
  3. The two constituent orthogonal linearly polarized states of natural light cannot interfere to form a readily observable interference pattern, even if rotated into alignment (because they are incoherent).

Formulation and discussion

Consider the interference of two waves given by the form

𝐄𝟏(𝐫,t)=𝐄01cos(𝐤𝟏𝐫ωt+ϵ1)
𝐄𝟐(𝐫,t)=𝐄02cos(𝐤𝟐𝐫ωt+ϵ2),

where the boldface indicates that the relevant quantity is a vector. The intensity of light goes as the electric field absolute square (in fact, I=ϵv𝐄2T, where the angled brackets denote a time average), and so we just add the fields before squaring them. Extensive algebra [2] yields an interference term in the intensity of the resultant wave, namely:

I12=ϵv𝐄𝟎𝟏𝐄𝟎𝟐cosδ,

where the initial fields are involved in a complex dot product 𝐄𝟎𝟏𝐄𝟎𝟐; the cosine argument is a phase difference δ arising from a combined path length and initial phase-angle difference is:

δ=𝐤𝟏𝐫𝐤𝟐𝐫+ϵ1ϵ2

Now it can be seen that if 𝐄𝟎𝟏 is perpendicular to 𝐄𝟎𝟐 (as in the case of the first Fresnel–Arago law), I12=0 and there is no interference. On the other hand, if 𝐄𝟎𝟏 is parallel to 𝐄𝟎𝟐 (as in the case of the second Fresnel–Arago law), the interference term produces a variation in the light intensity corresponding to cosδ. Finally, if natural light is decomposed into orthogonal linear polarizations (as in the third Fresnel–Arago law), these states are incoherent, meaning that the phase difference δ will be fluctuating so quickly and randomly that after time-averaging we have cosδT=0, so again I12=0 and there is no interference (even if 𝐄𝟎𝟏 is rotated so that it is parallel to 𝐄𝟎𝟐).

See also

References

  1. World of Physics; http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/Fresnel-AragoLaws.html
  2. Optics, Hecht, 4th edition, pp. 386-7


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