- #1
orangeblue
- 6
- 0
Homework Statement
I'm a new physics teacher and was teaching about polarization of light today. A student asked me a question I wasn't sure of the answer to.
Let's say you have two polarizing filters stacked on top of one another. The first filter is held so that the spaces in the filter are horizontal. The other is turned so the spaces in the filer are at a 45 degree angle.
What happens after light passes through the stacked filters?
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
I understand that when light leaves a source, its electric fields vibrate in all different planes. (Each individual light wave's electric fields vibrate in ONE plane, but this plane could be in any direction - correct?)
So after the light passes through the horizontal filter, it is horizontally polarized. This means its electric fields vibrate only in the horizontal plane.
Now, how can ANY of those horizontally polarized waves pass through the angled filter? The direction of the field vibration doesn't match the filter spacing, so wouldn't the light just get absorbed, the same as it would when you have a vertical and horizontal filter overlapped?
Also, I don't understand what happens to the magnetic field in this process. Are the magnetic fields unaffected by the polarizing filters?