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Sol HW3

This document provides solutions to homework problems about optics topics like Malus' Law, polarization, pulse broadening in glass, microscope resolution, and Fermat's principle. The problems involve calculating light intensities, pulse widths, point spread functions, and applying principles like symmetry. Mathematical expressions and calculations are shown.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views6 pages

Sol HW3

This document provides solutions to homework problems about optics topics like Malus' Law, polarization, pulse broadening in glass, microscope resolution, and Fermat's principle. The problems involve calculating light intensities, pulse widths, point spread functions, and applying principles like symmetry. Mathematical expressions and calculations are shown.

Uploaded by

u.navya25
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ECE 460 2011 Fall

Homework 3 Solution

1.
a) Malus’ Law : where is the angle between light polarization and axis of
polarizer.

b) If two polarizers are present, the mutual angle between two axis gives the θ in Malus’ law.
As given above,

Here we can see that the light is first filtered by the first polarizer and the second polarizer
acts on the light already filtered by the first polarizer. Equation shows that the output of I will
be similar to a) but will have an envelope with a frequency of .

c) From b)
Thus, I=0.

d) As the first polarizer is parallel to the incident light, we only have to think of polarizer 2 and
3.
From the angle between 2&3:
Angle between 1&2:

e) For all the adjacent polarizers axis differences are .

If N is large (use Taylor expansion, )

Thus,

 
ECE 460 2011 Fall

2. Refer to www.wolframalpha.com or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_integrals


for the calculation needed here.

a)

b)
before glass,

After glass,

Pulse broadens by a factor of

c)
before glass

 
ECE 460 2011 Fall

After glass,

As is purely imaginary.
Thus same result.

d)
Power spectrum .
identical problem.

f)

 
ECE 460 2011 Fall

3. Here note that x,y are separate variables so you can calculate them separately.

a)

b) Symmetry applies for x and y direction so calculate for x.


Before microscope,

After microscope,

 
ECE 460 2011 Fall

c) , let

d) Same as c as in #2

e)

4. #2 and #3 shows broadening in temporal domain and spatial domain. This is why calculation for
both problems are almost identical.

 
ECE 460 2011 Fall

5. Fermat’s principle : minimize optical path length

Optical path length :

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