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A person riding in a boat observes that the sunlight reflected by the water is polarized parallel to the surface of the water. The person is wearing polarized sunglasses with the polarization axis vertical.

If the wearer leans at an angle of 19.5 degrees to the vertical, what fraction of the reflected light intensity will pass through the sunglasses?

1 Answer

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The angle of incidence, when there is perfect transmission is the polarization angle. The expression for the polarization is


\theta = 90-\phi

Where


\theta = Polarization angle


\phi = Angle with the vertical axis

We have that the angle is


\theta = 90-19.5


\theta = 70.5\°

The ratio of the intensities depends on the cosine of the polarization angle. The polarization angle found from the wearer’s leaning angle can be used to find the fraction of the reflected ray intensity that will pass through the sunglasses.

Applying the Malus Law we have that


(I)/(I_0) = cos^2 \theta

Here,


I = Final intensity


I_0 = Initial intensity

Replacing we have,


(I)/(I_0) = cos^2 (70.5)


(I)/(I_0) = 0.11

Therefore the fraction of the reflected light intensity which passes through the sunglasses is 0.11

User PersianExcursion
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