my question is related to another one I asked, but I foolishly made that question about several things (experiment, computation, theory) at once so it was confused.
I was talking to my boss about theoretically modeling the reflection and transmission of incident light on a thin film, like this (warning: PDF). Essentially they use a plane wave model with propagation matrices through "slab" (thin film) and "matching matrices" to match the fields across boundaries. In each region (except the final transmitted region) there are waves going in both directions because both are solutions to MW's equations.
That seems to be pretty standard and straightforward to me. There's no inherent length scales in it, so intuitively it would seem to me like it'll work at all dimensions. However, he took one look at it and said that it's wrong to use plane waves here. I didn't entirely understand it at the time (hence, why I'm asking here), but I think he was saying:
- A plane wave is just one part of the solution of dipole radiation, the far field part (true, but why is this important here? Is it because the material is really just dipoles being oscillated and re-emitting?)
- He also mentioned something about the "amplitude not being well defined" I think, if the wave is decaying very quickly. This confused me because I thought if you have a notable decay index, you just find $n = n_r + i n_i \rightarrow k = k_r + i k_i \rightarrow E \propto e^{ikz} = e^{-k_i z}e^{ik_r z}$ and then your amplitude is determined by the exponential decay term at any point.
Can anyone shed some light on this?