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A dual-beam polarimeter suitable for measuring linear polarization usually
contains the following optical components:
- A focal-plane mask.
- A half-wave plate.
- An analyser.
- A detector.
The light collected by the telescope passes through these components in
the order listed (see the next figure
). Each component is described more fully below.
 |
The main optical components in a
typical dual-beam imaging polarimeter.
The heart of the polarimeter is the analyser, which splits incoming
partially plane polarized light up into two beams; one (called the
ordinary, or
ray) contains the component of the incoming light
which is polarized parallel to the axis of the analyser, and the other
(called the extraordinary, or
ray) contains the component of the
incoming light which is polarized orthogonally to the axis of the
analyser. These two beams are recorded simultaneously on a suitable
detector such as a CCD. The advantage of this system over a single-beam
instrument (in which only one state of polarization is recorded on a
given exposure), is that variations in sky background between exposures
affect both states of polarization equally, and so can be eliminated.
In an imaging polarimeter, the two beams form two images on the detector,
displaced by some distance determined by the design of the instrument;
both images representing the same area of the sky. A masking system
is used to prevent any overlap between the two images. In some
instruments this takes the form of a series of parallel, equally spaced
bars in the focal plane of the telescope (see
the next figure). In
this case, the instrument is designed so that the displacement between
the two images formed by the
and
rays is perpendicular to the
bars, and equal in size to the width of a bar. Thus, the two images form
two inter-leaving sets of bars. There are several other systems (such as
a mask containing only a single aperture), but the principle is the same.
 |
An example of a masking system used in
a dual-beam imaging polarimeter.
If the incoming light is only partially polarized, then at least two
exposures are required to estimate both the degree and the orientation of
the polarization, each exposure recording the intensity in two orthogonal
states of polarization as described above. The analyser axis is rotated
in steps of 45 degrees between these exposures. In practice, physically rotating
the analyser would result in the displacement between the
and
the
ray images also rotating. This would cause the images to overlap
on the detector and would make the data reduction process much harder (if
not impossible). For this reason, the analyser is usually left in a fixed
position, and the plane of polarization of the incoming light is rotated
instead. This is achieved by placing a half-wave plate in
front of the analyser, and rotating it in steps of 22.5 degrees, resulting in
a rotation of the plane of polarization of 45 degrees. Using this scheme the
positions of the
and
ray images on the detector are unchanged.
The orientation of the plane of polarization of the incoming light is
measured relative to a fixed ``reference'' direction. The analyser axis
and the 0 degrees position of the half-wave plate are usually parallel to
this direction.
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POLPACK
Starlink User Note 223
D.S. Berry & T.M. Gledhill
26th February 2003
E-mail:ussc@star.rl.ac.uk
Copyright © 2010 Science and Technology Facilities Council