Skip to main content
improved readability
Link
Qmechanic
  • 212.9k
  • 48
  • 589
  • 2.3k

When a light it transmitted and reflected frombeam reaches a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected beams have different intensities depending on polarization. For the so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light is lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

When light it transmitted and reflected from a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected. For the so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light is lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

When a light beam reaches a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected beams have different intensities depending on polarization. For the so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light is lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

added 7 characters in body; edited tags
Source Link
Manishearth
  • 19.1k
  • 6
  • 62
  • 104

When light it transmitted and reflected from a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected. For the so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light is lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

When light it transmitted and reflected from a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected. For so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

When light it transmitted and reflected from a dielectric surface, the incident and reflected. For the so-called Brewster's angle, the reflected light is lineary polarized.

My question is: how does this law work in case of mirror-like surface, when (ideally) all the light is reflected?

Tweeted twitter.com/#!/StackPhysics/status/79432315167715330
Source Link
malina
  • 727
  • 2
  • 7
  • 17
Loading