Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second English edition
- Preface to the first edition
- Introduction
- 1 Abbe's sine condition
- 2 Fourier optics
- 3 Effect of polarization on diffraction in systems of high numerical aperture
- 4 Gaussian beam optics
- 5 Coherent and incoherent imaging
- 6 First-order temporal coherence in classical optics
- 7 The van Cittert–Zernike theorem
- 8 Partial polarization, Stokes parameters, and the Poincaré sphere
- 9 Second-order coherence and the Hanbury Brown–Twiss experiment
- 10 What in the world are surface plasmons?
- 11 Surface plasmon polaritons on metallic surfaces
- 12 The Faraday effect
- 13 The magneto-optical Kerr effect
- 14 The Sagnac interferometer
- 15 Fabry–Pérot etalons in polarized light
- 16 The Ewald–Oseen extinction theorem
- 17 Reciprocity in classical linear optics
- 18 Optical pulse compression
- 19 The uncertainty principle in classical optics
- 20 Omni-directional dielectric mirrors
- 21 Linear optical vortices
- 22 Geometric-optical rays, Poynting's vector, and the field momenta
- 23 Doppler shift, stellar aberration, and convection of light by moving media
- 24 Diffraction gratings
- 25 Diffractive optical elements
- 26 The Talbot effect
- 27 Some quirks of total internal reflection
- 28 Evanescent coupling
- 29 Internal and external conical refraction
- 30 Transmission of light through small elliptical apertures
- 31 The method of Fox and Li
- 32 The beam propagation method
- 33 Launching light into a fiber
- 34 The optics of semiconductor diode lasers
- 35 Michelson's stellar interferometer
- 36 Bracewell's interferometric telescope
- 37 Scanning optical microscopy
- 38 Zernike's method of phase contrast
- 39 Polarization microscopy
- 40 Nomarski's differential interference contrast microscope
- 41 The van Leeuwenhoek microscope
- 42 Projection photolithography
- 43 Interaction of light with subwavelength structures
- 44 The Ronchi test
- 45 The Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor
- 46 Ellipsometry
- 47 Holography and holographic interferometry
- 48 Self-focusing in nonlinear optical media
- 49 Spatial optical solitons
- 50 Laser heating of multilayer stacks
- Index
- References
12 - The Faraday effect
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second English edition
- Preface to the first edition
- Introduction
- 1 Abbe's sine condition
- 2 Fourier optics
- 3 Effect of polarization on diffraction in systems of high numerical aperture
- 4 Gaussian beam optics
- 5 Coherent and incoherent imaging
- 6 First-order temporal coherence in classical optics
- 7 The van Cittert–Zernike theorem
- 8 Partial polarization, Stokes parameters, and the Poincaré sphere
- 9 Second-order coherence and the Hanbury Brown–Twiss experiment
- 10 What in the world are surface plasmons?
- 11 Surface plasmon polaritons on metallic surfaces
- 12 The Faraday effect
- 13 The magneto-optical Kerr effect
- 14 The Sagnac interferometer
- 15 Fabry–Pérot etalons in polarized light
- 16 The Ewald–Oseen extinction theorem
- 17 Reciprocity in classical linear optics
- 18 Optical pulse compression
- 19 The uncertainty principle in classical optics
- 20 Omni-directional dielectric mirrors
- 21 Linear optical vortices
- 22 Geometric-optical rays, Poynting's vector, and the field momenta
- 23 Doppler shift, stellar aberration, and convection of light by moving media
- 24 Diffraction gratings
- 25 Diffractive optical elements
- 26 The Talbot effect
- 27 Some quirks of total internal reflection
- 28 Evanescent coupling
- 29 Internal and external conical refraction
- 30 Transmission of light through small elliptical apertures
- 31 The method of Fox and Li
- 32 The beam propagation method
- 33 Launching light into a fiber
- 34 The optics of semiconductor diode lasers
- 35 Michelson's stellar interferometer
- 36 Bracewell's interferometric telescope
- 37 Scanning optical microscopy
- 38 Zernike's method of phase contrast
- 39 Polarization microscopy
- 40 Nomarski's differential interference contrast microscope
- 41 The van Leeuwenhoek microscope
- 42 Projection photolithography
- 43 Interaction of light with subwavelength structures
- 44 The Ronchi test
- 45 The Shack–Hartmann wavefront sensor
- 46 Ellipsometry
- 47 Holography and holographic interferometry
- 48 Self-focusing in nonlinear optical media
- 49 Spatial optical solitons
- 50 Laser heating of multilayer stacks
- Index
- References
Summary
Michael Faraday (1791–1867) was born in a village near London into the family of a blacksmith. His family was too poor to keep him at school and, at the age of 13, he took a job as an errand boy in a bookshop. A year later he was apprenticed as a bookbinder for a term of seven years. Faraday was not only binding the books but was also reading many of them, which excited in him a burning interest in science.
When his term of apprenticeship in the bookshop was coming to an end, he applied for the job of assistant to Sir Humphry Davy, the celebrated chemist, whose lectures Faraday was attending during his apprenticeship. When Davy asked the advice of one of the governors of the Royal Institution of Great Britain about the employment of a young bookbinder, the man said: “Let him wash bottles! If he is any good he will accept the work; if he refuses, he is not good for anything.” Faraday accepted, and remained with the Royal Institution for the next fifty years, first as Davy's assistant, then as his collaborator, and finally, after Davy's death, as his successor. It has been said that Faraday was Davy's greatest discovery.
In 1823 Faraday liquefied chlorine and in 1825 he discovered the substance known as benzene. He also did significant work in electrochemistry, discovering the laws of electrolysis. However, his greatest work was with electricity.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Classical Optics and its Applications , pp. 152 - 165Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009