File:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Circular.Polarizer Creating.Left.Handed.Helix.View-el.svg

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English: In the set up the transmission axis of the linear polarizer, represented with an orange line, is at a positive 45° angle. On the quarter-wave plate, also represented in orange, is the horizontal slow axis and the vertical fast axis. In this instance the unpolarized light entering the linear polarizer is displayed as a single wave whose linear polarization is suddenly changing its angle and magnitude. When one attempts to pass unpolarized light through the linear polarizer, only light that has its electric field at the positive 45° angle leaves the linear polarizer and enters the quarter-wave plate. To understand the effect the quarter-wave plate has on the linearly polarized light it is useful think of the light being divided into two components at right angles (orthogonal ). Toward this end, the blue and green lines are projections of the red line onto the vertical and horizontal planes respectively and represent how the electric field changes in the direction of those two planes. The two components have the same amplitude and are in phase. Because the quarter-wave plate is made of a birefringent material, when in the wave plate, the light travels at different speeds depending on the direction of its electric field. This means that the horizontal component which is along the slow axis of the wave plate will travel at a slightly slower speed than the component that is directed along the vertical fast axis. Initially the two components are in phase, but as the two components travel through the wave plate the horizontal component of the light drifts farther behind that of the vertical. By adjusting the thickness of the wave plate one can control how much the horizontal component is delayed relative to vertical component before the light leaves the wave plate and they again begin to travel at the same speed. When the light leaves the quarter-wave plate the rightward horizontal component will be exactly one quarter of a wavelength behind the vertical component making the light left hand circularly polarized. ---- This image was created using the open source program Inkscape. If you open it using that program the image will still be divided into layers and you will have access to information used to create it. If you need to alter it I would suggest first going to my Wikimedia User page at Dave3457 where information is gathered and other related images are listed.
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This is a retouched picture, which means that it has been digitally altered from its original version. Modifications: translation of original illustration in greek language. The original can be viewed here: Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light Circular.Polarizer Creating.Left.Handed.Helix.View.svg. Modifications made by Ggia.

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This image is a derivative work of the following images:

  • File:Circular.Polarization.Circularly.Polarized.Light_Circular.Polarizer_Creating.Left.Handed.Helix.View.svg licensed with PD-self
    • 2010-04-01T19:54:49Z Dave3457 791x348 (987278 Bytes) very very slight change
    • 2010-04-01T19:19:40Z Dave3457 791x348 (987280 Bytes) try again to change order of unpolarized light
    • 2010-04-01T19:18:21Z Dave3457 791x348 (987734 Bytes) Reverted to version as of 19:05, 1 April 2010
    • 2010-04-01T19:16:40Z Dave3457 791x348 (987734 Bytes) Changed order of unpolarized light
    • 2010-04-01T19:05:43Z Dave3457 791x348 (987734 Bytes) added two guides
    • 2010-03-29T01:10:35Z Dave3457 791x348 (986309 Bytes) {{Information |Description={{en|1=In the set up the transmission axis of the linear polarizer, represented with an orange line, is at a positive 45° angle. On the quarter-wave plate, also represented in orange, is the horizo

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current10:07, 19 September 2010Thumbnail for version as of 10:07, 19 September 2010791 × 348 (827 KB)Ggia (talk | contribs)previous version is not rendering.. trying a new version
10:05, 19 September 2010Thumbnail for version as of 10:05, 19 September 2010791 × 348 (993 KB)Ggia (talk | contribs)previous version was not rendering.. trying this one..
10:02, 19 September 2010Thumbnail for version as of 10:02, 19 September 2010791 × 348 (1.18 MB)Ggia (talk | contribs){{Information |Description={{en|1=In the set up the transmission axis of the linear polarizer, represented with an orange line, is at a positive 45° angle. On the quarter-wave plate, also represented in orange, is the horizontal slow axis and the vertica

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