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6 - Absorption and dispersion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2009

Jose Carlos del Toro Iniesta
Affiliation:
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía
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Summary

“El clero era absorbente”. Sobre todo Don Fermín había sido un poco jesuita.

—Leopoldo Alas, Clarín, 1885.

‘The clergy were like a sponge.’ And what was more, Don Fermin had once been something of a Jesuit.

So far we have avoided detailed discussion about two physical phenomena that are crucial in the context of this book and for any understanding of the interaction between matter and radiation in general. These two phenomena are absorption and dispersion, that is, the removal of energy from the electromagnetic field by matter and the dephasing of the electric field components as light streams through the medium. Although we have barely mentioned the existence of these effects, we shall need a deeper insight into both of them. We shall see that retardance, birefringence, and absorption properties of polarization systems, assumed in the preceding sections, are based on these phenomena, whose wavelength dependence is understood in terms of the wavelength dependence of the dielectric permittivity and, hence, of the refractive index of the medium. By studying absorption and dispersion we are producing the necessary bricks with which to build a theory of radiative energy transfer which will be discussed in following chapters. We shall continue to assume unit isotropic magnetic permeability of μ = 1 for the medium.

Certainly, a full account of absorption and dispersion processes can be carried out only within the framework of quantum mechanics.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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