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Questions tagged [optics]

Optics is the study of light, and its interaction with matter. It includes topics such as imaging systems, fiber optics, lasers, quantum optics, and more.

1,808 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
8 votes
2 answers
178 views

What makes diffraction spikes move with the focus?

This is a bit of a follow up on The Bahtinov focusing mask and it came with this question on Astronomy. But I think the effect can also be observed when looking through a hazy atmosphere or a stained ...
user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
153 views

How can daylight have a higher colour temperature (e.g. 6500 K or D65) than sunlight in space?

Supposedly, daylight at midday has a colour temperature of 6500 K. This reference is also the standard for calibrating computer screens (that's how I fell into this). However, outside the atmosphere ...
OsthatoAlfakyn's user avatar
7 votes
3 answers
1k views

Images formed by a pair of plane mirrors

I've been taught that if a point-sized object is placed between two plane mirrors at an angle theta with each other, then the number of images formed is $360^{\circ}/\theta$ or $360^{\circ}/\theta - 1$...
ghosts_in_the_code's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
483 views

What is the energy loss in total internal reflection?

In total internal reflection light inside a dense medium reflects from the boundary to a less dense medium. Since by Snell's law there is no allowed refracted ray, all energy continues along the ...
Anders Sandberg's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
187 views

Why does sunlight on these windows form caustics with a seemingly hyperbolic pattern?

I noticed these caustics outside my office about a month ago and took pictures: one facing towards the sun and one facing towards the reflective surface (a set of double-paned windows). The seemingly-...
Halyn Betchkal's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
647 views

Complex part of second-order susceptibility in nonlinear optics

In optics, the absorption of photons by a material can be described by considering the material's susceptibility. For linear absorption (involving a single photon), we think about the imaginary part ...
Liz Salander's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
413 views

Explanation for possible interference on a home mirror?

I've noticed that a few peculiar things about home commercial mirrors that aren't present with industrial/scientific mirrors. This is one of the mirrors I used. With the mirror like the one above, ...
Maximal Ideal's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
245 views

Are there yet Optical Magnetic Mirrors (OMMs) which reflect via interaction with the magnetic field?

update 2021: As the question has remained unanswered for five years and the field of optical metamaterials has advanced, I think this question can be revisited. The most familiar mirror relies on ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 6,273
6 votes
1 answer
986 views

Why is an exciton only observed when we excite to the conduction band and not to other electronic level inside the bandgap?

Excitons can be observed when we excite electrons to the conduction band. I don't know about excitons being observed when we excite the electrons to an electronic level that would eventually be in ...
cinico's user avatar
  • 1,334
6 votes
1 answer
3k views

Explaining phase shift from a half-silvered mirror

I am trying to understand why light undergoes a phase shift when reflecting off one side of a half-silvered mirror, but not the other side. This Wikipedia page and this answer both give the following ...
Vacuous's user avatar
  • 86
6 votes
2 answers
310 views

Spatial wave-function of a single photon and its measurement

In the last decade there were several papers claiming that they've measured a "transverse quantum state" / "quantum wave-function" / "spatial Wigner function" of a single photon: Measurement of the ...
Basil's user avatar
  • 71
5 votes
0 answers
239 views

How does the fractional Fourier transform apply to an out-of-focus imaging system? Do we use the fractional distance to the focal plane?

In Fourier optics it is sometimes convenient to think of lenses as "Fourier transformers". For an imaging system between two planes with a pupil in the center, the amplitude in the pupil is ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 6,273
5 votes
0 answers
91 views

Books recommendation to understand Quantum Confined Stark Effect

I am starting a PhD on a photonic component involved with QCSE. The problem is that I have a Master degree in electronical engineering, not in fundamental physics, and I need to understand the QCSE in ...
5 votes
0 answers
87 views

Simulation of a dispersive crystal mirror

I am trying to simulate a simple setup where I have a point source of broadband light whose light is incident upon a spherical crystal at a central angle $\theta_i$. Assuming Bragg diffraction some of ...
Akerai's user avatar
  • 1,047
5 votes
2 answers
819 views

Deriving the non-paraxial form of Rayleigh criterion

Background The Rayleigh criterion of imaging resolution says that two incoherent point sources are barely resolved by a diffraction-limited system with a circular aperture where the center of the ...
wcc's user avatar
  • 1,256
5 votes
0 answers
123 views

Is it caustic reflection or hyperbolic projection?

actually last night I noticed a strange form of light rays on the wall of my room which were reflected off a CD. Here is its photo: Please let me know what is it exactly? A caustic projection or ...
Twiching Frames's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
7k views

What is Curvature of eye lens?

I wanted to know what do we mean by "curvature of eye lens", is it the reciprocal of $r$ i.e $c=1/r$ or is it synonymous to radius of curvature of the eye lens. Moreover how does aperture relate to ...
Anamika Ghosh's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
1k views

Finding the illuminance from a triangular light source

Since most light sources in games are point-like, it's pretty difficult to approximate area light sources with point sources. As triangles are a universal form to represent 3D models (thus area light ...
5 votes
2 answers
251 views

Astronauts in spacecraft, they have to circle the earth many times a day, do they also have the illusion of the moon?

Astronauts in spacecraft, they have to circle the earth many times a day, do they also have the illusion of the moon? I don't think they have, because according to the theory, the illusion of the moon ...
enbin's user avatar
  • 2,040
5 votes
1 answer
580 views

Homogeneous gain saturation and single-longitudinal-mode lasing

I am currently studying Laser Systems Engineering by Keith Kasunic. Chapter 1.2.1 Temporal Coherence says the following: Whether or not multiple axial modes will lase depends, in part, on the cavity-...
The Pointer's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
233 views

Is Hong–Ou–Mandel effect reversible?

According to Hong–Ou–Mandel effect, two photons coming from the different ports will output by the same port with 2 photons since the cross term is canceled by a 1:1 beamsplitter. Since "light ...
hengyue li's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
384 views

Why does the sun not burn your retinas when in peripheral vision?

After going to the ophthalmologist and having bright lights shone in my eyes, I was thinking about how the brightness only hurts when I looked at the light. When it was in my peripheral vision, it ...
Drake P's user avatar
  • 159
4 votes
0 answers
115 views

How is the phase gain of a Fabry-Perot resonator for gravitational wave detection derived?

I am trying to understand the use of the Fabry-Perot (FP) resonator in the arms of a gravitational wave detector. A typical explanation is that the gain in power in the arms is equal to $\sqrt{F}$ (...
ProfRob's user avatar
  • 133k
4 votes
0 answers
286 views

Huygens principle and path integral for classical waves

I want to better understand what the path integral is and what it isn't. Even though I do this to learn QFT, this question is purely concerned with classical fields, no quantization is intended at all....
akreuzkamp's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
115 views

Confusion regarding Young's double slit experiment in different media

The Problem Consider the given arrangement: Point $P$ is equidistant from $S_1$ and $S_2$ .The glass slab in air has refractive index $\mu_{2}$, and the one in water($\mu_{1}$) has refractive index $...
satan 29's user avatar
  • 1,295
4 votes
1 answer
211 views

How smooth/rough is a liquid surface?

Surface tension makes liquid surfaces smooth, but how smooth? How rough? This question has an Experimental version and a Theoretical version: E : Optics manufacturers quote specs like $1/4$ or $1/8$ ...
fyodrpetrovich's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
111 views

What causes this circular reflection to form?

Holed up at home, I was distracting myself by shining my green laser pointer around. Something particularly interesting happened when I pointed the laser at a reflective black plastic surface. The ...
Ethan Dlugie's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
157 views

Interference of single photons emitted from solid state sources

Solid state emitters such as quantum dots are thought of as being amongst the best single photon sources for quantum technology. There have been impressive demonstrations of >10 photon experiments ...
ChrisM's user avatar
  • 1,710
4 votes
0 answers
307 views

Electromagnetic energy density in a nonlinear medium

The energy density associated with the electric field in a linear medium of permitivity $ \epsilon $ is given as $$ U = \frac{1}{2}\epsilon\left | E \right |^{2} $$ As Robert Boyd mentions in the ...
jayanta deka's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
183 views

Amplitude of single-mode field in a cavity

I have two contradictory result about the amplitude of single mode field when it is quantized In C. Gerry and P. Knight's Introductory quantum optics, the amplitude is given by $$\sqrt{\frac{2\omega^...
min Fe's user avatar
  • 153

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