Dichroism

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Dichroic
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Lampworked dichroic glass bead

In

colours) (not to be confused with dispersion), or one in which light rays having different polarizations are absorbed by different amounts.[1]

In beam splitters

The original meaning of dichroic, from the

filters, usually treated with optical coatings, which are designed to reflect light over a certain range of wavelengths and transmit light which is outside that range. An example is the dichroic prism, used in some camcorders, which uses several coatings to split light into red, green and blue components for recording on separate CCD arrays, however it is now more common to have a Bayer filter
to filter individual pixels on a single CCD array. This kind of dichroic device does not usually depend on the polarization of the light. The term dichromatic is also used in this sense.

With polarized light

The second meaning of dichroic refers to the property of a material, in which light in different polarization states traveling through it experiences a different

chiral,[2] although non-chiral materials showing CD have been recently observed.[3] Since the left- and right-handed circular polarizations represent two spin angular momentum (SAM) states, in this case for a photon, this dichroism can also be thought of as spin angular momentum dichroism and could be modelled using quantum mechanics
.

In some

which?], such as tourmaline, the strength of the dichroic effect varies strongly with the wavelength of the light, making them appear to have different colours when viewed with light having differing polarizations.[dubious ] This is more generally referred to as pleochroism,[4] and the technique can be used in mineralogy to identify minerals. In some materials, such as herapathite (iodoquinine sulfate) or Polaroid
sheets, the effect is not strongly dependent on wavelength.

In liquid crystals

Dichroism, in the second meaning above, occurs in

See also

References