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  2. Polycarbonate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polycarbonate

    Polycarbonate is commonly used in eye protection, as well as in other projectile-resistant viewing and lighting applications that would normally indicate the use of glass, but require much higher impact-resistance. Polycarbonate lenses also protect the eye from UV light.

  3. Polarizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polarizer

    Light polarized in the plane is said to be p-polarized, while that polarized perpendicular to it is s-polarized. At a special angle known as Brewster's angle, no p-polarized light is reflected from the surface, thus all reflected light must be s-polarized, with an electric field perpendicular to the plane of incidence.

  4. Brewster's angle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster's_angle

    Brewster's angle is often referred to as the "polarizing angle", because light that reflects from a surface at this angle is entirely polarized perpendicular to the plane of incidence ("s-polarized"). A glass plate or a stack of plates placed at Brewster's angle in a light beam can, thus, be used as a polarizer.

  5. Birefringence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birefringence

    Polarized light microscopes, which contain two polarizers that are at 90° to each other on either side of the sample, are used to visualize birefringence, since light that has not been affected by birefringence remains in a polarization that is totally rejected by the second polarizer ("analyzer"). The addition of quarter-wave plates permits ...

  6. List of refractive indices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_refractive_indices

    Plate glass (window glass) 1.52 [29] Crown glass (pure) 1.50–1.54: PETg: 1.57: Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) 1.5750: Polycarbonate: 150: 1.60 [30] Crown glass (impure) 1.485–1.755: Flint glass (pure) 1.60–1.62: Bromine: 1.661: Flint glass (impure) 1.523–1.925: Sapphire: 1.762–1.778: Boron nitride: 2–2.14 [31] Cubic zirconia: 2.15 ...

  7. Photoelasticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoelasticity

    Tension lines in a plastic protractor seen under cross-polarized light. The experimental procedure relies on the property of birefringence, as exhibited by certain transparent materials. Birefringence is a phenomenon in which a ray of light passing through a given material experiences two refractive indices.