Beam Splitter

A beam splitter is an optical device, that splits a beam of light in two. It is the crucial part of most interferometers. In its most common form, it is a cube, made from two triangular glass prisms which are glued together at their base using canada balsam. The thickness of the resin layer is adjusted such that (for a certain wavelength) half of the light incident through one "port" (i.e. face of the cube) is reflected and the other half is transmitted. Another possible design is the use of a "half-silvered mirror". This is a plate of glass with a thin coating of silver (usually deposited from silver vapour) with the thickness of the silver coated such that of light incident at a 45 degree angle, one half is transmitted and one half it reflected. Instead of a silver coating, a dielectric optical coating may be used instead. A third version of the beam splitter is a dichroic mirrored prism assembly that splits the incoming light into three beams, one each of red, green and blue. Such a device was used in multi-tube colour television cameras and also in the 3 film Technicolor movie cameras.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
modplug tracker
pron
quemauville
eraines
ernes
escoville
quadratic sieve
espins
esquay notre dame
esquay sur seulles
esson
british rail class 09
estres la campagne
clarendon
estry
terville
charter oak
huacho
shirley (novel)
international sailing federation
russell, ontario (community)
korean chess
mark pincus
ernestine rose
nine to five
seadra
morten linberg
el hadji diouf
irminsul
granville district
switch (rod)
chuhei nambu
shiant isles
advance wars
luhn algorithm
yvonne printemps
age of aquarius
del tha funkee homosapien
khwarezmid empire
sacha guitry
flannan isles
thomas kent
fyksland
oogenesis