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I am analyzing the polarization state of a monochromatic, coherent light source, for which I know the Jones vector of the polarization, $$ \mathbf E =\begin{pmatrix}E_x\\E_y\end{pmatrix} =\begin{pmatrix}|E_x|e^{i\varphi_x}\\|E_y|e^{i\varphi_y}\end{pmatrix}, $$ and I would like to expand it in terms of a major and a minor axis of ellipticity, i.e. in the form $$ \mathbf E= e^{i\varphi}\left( A \hat{\mathbf u} + i B\hat{\mathbf v} \right) = e^{i\varphi}\left( A \begin{pmatrix}\cos(\theta)\\ \sin(\theta)\end{pmatrix} + i B \begin{pmatrix}-\sin(\theta)\\ \cos(\theta)\end{pmatrix} \right), $$ or as shown graphically as follows:

Image source

Wikipedia provides a multi-step procedure going through the Stokes parameters, but I'm thinking there is surely a cleaner and more direct way to get $A$, $B$, $\hat{\mathbf u}$, $\hat{\mathbf v}$, $\theta$, and the components $A \hat{\mathbf u}$ and $B\hat{\mathbf v}$, from $E_x$ and $E_y$, and it's not particularly obvious from the search results I can find. What's the cleanest way to do this?


To be clear: what I think is lacking from the existing resources, and what the question is directly asking for, is an explicit set of connections, as simple as possible, for the named parameters (all of $A$, $B$, $\hat{\mathbf u}$, $\hat{\mathbf v}$, $\theta$, and the components $A \hat{\mathbf u}$ and $B\hat{\mathbf v}$), in terms of the Cartesian components $E_x$ and $E_y$. Schemes that simply send to some other set of complex manipulations are already available from Wikipedia and are not what the question is asking for.

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    $\begingroup$ Just to be clear, this graph that you're swiping from Wikipedia appears to be something like the points $$\big(p(\psi), q(\psi)\big)= \big(|E_x|\cos(\psi + \phi_x),~|E_y|\cos(\psi + \phi_y\big).$$What stops the enterprising student from, say, minimizing/maximizing $p^2 + q^2$ to find something like (rectal extraction method) $$\tan(2\psi_c) = -\big(|E_x|^2\sin(2\phi_x)+ |E_y|^2\sin(2\phi_y)\big)/\big(|E_x|^2\cos(2\phi_x)+ |E_y|^2\cos(2\phi_y)\big)$$and then giving you a bunch of answers in terms of $\psi_c$? Just that it is not elegant enough to have this messy arctangent in the middle? $\endgroup$
    – CR Drost
    Commented Jan 30, 2017 at 15:57
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    $\begingroup$ To express the field in coordinate system of the ellipse, you have to find the eigenaxes of this ellipse from the Jones vector of polarization. The only way to do this I know is the diagonalization of $2\times 2$ matrix. The matrix to diagonalize in the process is the density matrix of the light. The decomposition of this matrix to the Pauli matrices gives you the Stokes parameters. So, this is not the question about physics, but the question about how to simplify the computation, isn't it? $\endgroup$
    – Misha
    Commented Jan 31, 2017 at 11:59
  • $\begingroup$ Maybe you could read the chapter six [in this book][1]. [1]: optics.byu.edu/BYUOpticsBook_2015.pdf $\endgroup$
    – Jack
    Commented Feb 3, 2017 at 6:25
  • $\begingroup$ Is there a reference explaining how to connect the complex vector $e^{-i\phi}\left(A \hat{u} + iB \hat{v}\right)$ to the polarization ellipse? This question and the paper in Emilio's answer seem to take it as obvious that this 2D vector parametrizes and ellipse, and I can tell it does, but am trying to work out the details. Like, is $\phi$ an arbitrary offset equivalent to changing the origin of time (the picture seems to indicate so) or is it related to the eccentriciy? $\endgroup$
    – Jagerber48
    Commented Oct 2, 2023 at 22:55
  • $\begingroup$ @Jagerber48 Any decent optics textbook should cover this. Indeed, $\phi$ acts as a time delay. The simplest way to understand this is by looking in a reference frame aligned with $\hat u$ and $\hat v$, in which case it is a trivial calculation to show that $$\mathrm{Re}\left[e^{-i\phi}(A\hat u+iB\hat v)e^{-i\omega t}\right] = (A\cos(\omega t+\phi), B\sin(\omega t+\phi))$$ (assuming real-valued $A,B$), and that is clearly the equation of an ellipse. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 3, 2023 at 16:35

3 Answers 3

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Let me try a second time. I use https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1204131/converting-a-rotated-ellipse-in-parametric-form-to-cartesian-form as a resource.

Prior Manipulations

The physical electric field is

$$\mathbf{E}_{phys} = Re\left[\mathbf{E} e^{i\omega t}\right] = Re\left[\begin{pmatrix}|E_x|e^{i\varphi_x}\\|E_y|e^{i\varphi_y}\end{pmatrix}e^{i\omega t}\right] = \begin{pmatrix}|E_x|\cos(\omega t + \varphi_x)\\|E_y| \cos(\omega t + \varphi_y)\end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix}|E_x|\left[\cos(\omega t)\cos(\varphi_x) - \sin(\omega t) \sin(\varphi_x) \right]\\|E_y| \left[\cos(\omega t)\cos(\varphi_y) - \sin(\omega t) \sin(\varphi_y) \right]\end{pmatrix}$$

This is a parametric equation for an ellipse, which is traced by the electric field.

Major axes angle

Let

$$a=|E_x|\cos(\varphi_x)$$

$$b=|E_x|\sin(\varphi_x)$$

$$c=|E_y|\cos(\varphi_y)$$

$$d=|E_y|\sin(\varphi_y)$$

Then by comparison with the linked math.SE question the accepted answer states that the major and minor axes point on the ellipse (which is centred on the origin) fulfill

$$\omega t={1\over2}\arctan{2(ab+cd)\over(a^2+c^2)-(b^2+d^2)}+{k\pi\over2}\qquad(0\leq k\leq3)\ .$$

Expansion required by the OP

Indeed this quantity is the angle $\theta$ in the expansion appearing in the OPs question. However depending on which value for $k$ is chosen in may be $\pi/2 - \theta$, a case distinction depending on the sector of the arctan is necessary.

This of course also yields $\hat{u}$ and $\hat{v}$, so the expansion can now be easily obtained by projecting the Jones vector this basis.

The formulae may be along, but constitute a close form solution to the problem up to the case distinction of choosing $k$. I do not see how a simpler solution can exist, since the formula give for the angle given does not seem algebraically reducible.

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  • $\begingroup$ Apologies for not awarding the bounty, but this was rather short of what I was looking for. I have now found the clean expressions I was after and added them as an answer. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 20, 2017 at 17:52
  • $\begingroup$ @EmilioPisanty no worries, I see now what you mean (see comment below your answer). $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 20, 2017 at 22:55
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The cleanest way to do this is offered by Michael Berry in the paper

Index formulae for singular lines of polarization. M V Berry, J. Opt. A: Pure Appl. Opt. 6, 675–678 (2004), author eprint.

In Berry's notation, the electric field can be written as $$ \mathbf E=\mathbf P +i \mathbf Q = e^{i\gamma} \left(\mathbf A+i\mathbf B\right), $$ where $\mathbf P$, $\mathbf Q$, $\mathbf A$ and $\mathbf B$ are real-valued vectors, $\mathbf A$ and $\mathbf B$ are respectively the major and minor axes of the polarization ellipse, and those two are defined up to a sign by $\mathbf A\cdot\mathbf B=0$ and $|\mathbf A|\geq |\mathbf B|$. With this notation, the polarization axes and the phase are defined as $$ \gamma = \frac12 \arg(\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E) \quad\text{and}\quad \mathbf A+i\mathbf B = \frac{\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*}}{\left|\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*}\right|}\mathbf E, $$ or in other words $$ \mathbf A = \frac{1}{\left|\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*}\right|}\mathrm{Re}\mathopen{}\left[\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*} \: \mathbf E\right]\mathclose{} \quad\text{and}\quad \mathbf B = \frac{1}{\left|\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*}\right|}\mathrm{Im}\mathopen{}\left[\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*} \: \mathbf E\right]\mathclose{}. $$ There is an obvious sign ambiguity, in that flipping both $\mathbf A$ and $\mathbf B$ and adding $\pi$ to $\gamma$ will not change anything (i.e. rotating the polarization ellipse by 180° is equivalent to adding a phase), which is reflected in the branch cuts of both the argument and the square root functions. These naturally mesh together so long as both branch cuts are taken on the same cut, ideally along the negative real axis.

As another tricky point, one should note that these formulas are not defined when $\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E=0$, which corresponds to circular polarization; in this case both the polarization axes, as well as the phase $\gamma$ at the major axis, are ill-defined, so this is not a problem.

As an added bonus, this approach also naturally gives the direction of the normal to the plane of the polarization ellipse, in the form $$ \mathbf C = \frac12 \mathrm{Im}\mathopen{}\left(\mathbf E^*\times\mathbf E\right)\mathclose{} =\mathbf P\times\mathbf Q =\mathbf A\times\mathbf B, $$ where the cross product $\mathbf E^*\times\mathbf E$ is naturally imaginary, as its conjugate is minus itself. Of course, this will vanish if $\mathbf E$ and $\mathbf E^*$ (or $\mathbf P$ and $\mathbf Q$) are linearly dependent, which corresponds to linear polarization; in this case, $\mathbf B$ will vanish, because $\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot \mathbf E^*} \: \mathbf E$ is naturally real.

Berry credits

Polarization singularities in paraxial vector fields: morphology and statistics. M R Dennis, Opt. Commun. 213, 201–21 (2002), eprint.

for this form, and that reference contains a fuller proof of how and why the decomposition works.

This is, in fact, rather simple, once you realize that the decomposition as $\mathbf E = e^{i\gamma} \left(\mathbf A+i\mathbf B\right)$, as above, must exist, because under those conditions the dot product reduces to $$ \mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E =e^{2i\gamma} \left(\mathbf A+i\mathbf B\right)\cdot \left(\mathbf A+i\mathbf B\right) =e^{2i\gamma}(\mathbf A^2-\mathbf B^2), $$ where $\mathbf A^2-\mathbf B^2$ is real and positive, so taking the argument of both sides naturally gives the phase as $2\gamma=\arg(\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E).$ Similarly, taking the modulus of that equation returns $\mathbf A^2-\mathbf B^2=|\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E|$, so we can simply get the phase factor as $$ e^{2i\gamma} =\frac{\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E}{\mathbf A^2-\mathbf B^2} =\frac{\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E}{|\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E|} ,\ \text{so}\ e^{i\gamma} =\frac{\sqrt{\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E}}{|\sqrt{\mathbf E\cdot\mathbf E}|} ,\ \text{and therefore}\ e^{-i\gamma} =\frac{\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot\mathbf E^*}}{|\sqrt{\mathbf E^*\cdot\mathbf E^*}|}; $$ the characterization for $\mathbf A+i\mathbf B$ then follows from $\mathbf E = e^{i\gamma} \left(\mathbf A+i\mathbf B\right)$ by simply dividing by $e^{i\gamma}$.

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  • $\begingroup$ that's fair, I can see how this is neater. Initially it just seemed like a geometrical problem to me which is why I responded with a rather short answer. I also think that you're solution here provides more physical insight through the smart use of parametrization and complex operations. Therefore +1 from me $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 20, 2017 at 22:54
  • $\begingroup$ I think some messy algebra would still need to be done to get equations directly relating $E_x$ and $E_y$ (magnitudes and phases) to the ellipse major/minor axis magnitudes and the ellipse rotation angle $\endgroup$
    – Jagerber48
    Commented Oct 3, 2023 at 19:02
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I think you can accomplish this with a singular-value decomposition. I'll start by writing $\mathbf{E}$ in the following form

$\mathbf{E} = E_x \mathbf{\hat{x}} + E_y \mathbf{\hat{y}} = E_u \mathbf{\hat{u}} + E_v \mathbf{\hat{v}}$

where $E_x$ and $E_y$ are known complex numbers. In general $E_x E_y^* \ne 0$, but we want $E_u E_v^*=0$. We can write this in matrix form as

$\left( \begin{array}{cc} \mathbf{\hat{x}} & \mathbf{\hat{y}} \end{array} \right) \left( \begin{array}{c} E_x \\ E_y \end{array} \right) = \left( \begin{array}{cc} \mathbf{\hat{u}} & \mathbf{\hat{v}} \end{array} \right) \left( \begin{array}{c} E_u \\ E_v \end{array} \right)$

We should be able to write

$\left( \begin{array}{cc} \mathbf{\hat{x}} & \mathbf{\hat{y}} \end{array} \right) = \left( \begin{array}{cc} \mathbf{\hat{u}} & \mathbf{\hat{v}} \end{array} \right) \Lambda^T$

where $\Lambda$ is a real, orthogonal matrix which describes a rotation of coordinate systems. It is currently unknown. Since we assume that $\mathbf{\hat{x}}$ and $\mathbf{\hat{y}}$ are orthogonal, then $\mathbf{\hat{u}}$ and $\mathbf{\hat{v}}$ will also be orthogonal. And we can also write

$ \left( \begin{array}{c} E_x \\ E_y \end{array} \right) = A \left( \begin{array}{c} 1 \\ i \end{array} \right)$

where $A = \left( \begin{array}{cc} a & b\\c & d \end{array} \right)$ is a known real matrix. We can decompose $A$ using a singular value decomposition

$A = U S V^T$

where $U$,$S$, and $V$ are real matrices. $U$ and $V$ are orthogonal matrices and $S=\left(\begin{array}{cc}A&0\\0&B\end{array}\right)$ where $A$ and $B$ are positive with $A\ge B$.

This all yields

$ \Lambda^T U S V^T \left( \begin{array}{c} 1 \\ i \end{array} \right) = \left( \begin{array}{c} E_u \\ E_v \end{array} \right)$

If we choose $\Lambda = U$, which gives $\mathbf{\hat{u}}$ and $\mathbf{\hat{v}}$, then this reduces to

$ S V^T \left( \begin{array}{c} 1 \\ i \end{array} \right) = \left( \begin{array}{c} E_u \\ E_v \end{array} \right)$

Since $V$ is an orthogonal matrix, so is $V^T$, and $S$ is diagonal and real, so $E_u E_v^*=0$.

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  • $\begingroup$ I wrote this up in a little bit of a hurry, so I might have missed something or have been imprecise. I apologize if that's the case. $\endgroup$
    – LedHead
    Commented Feb 5, 2017 at 1:46

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