2 - What is a qubit?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2012
Summary
The polarization of light
Our first example of a qubit will be the polarization of a photon. First we briefly review the subject of light polarization. The polarization of light was demonstrated for the first time by the Chevalier Malus in 1809. He observed the light of the setting sun reflected by the glass of a window in the Luxembourg Palace in Paris through a crystal of Iceland spar. He showed that when the crystal was rotated, one of the two images of the sun disappeared. Iceland spar is a birefringent crystal which, as we shall see below, decomposes a light ray into two rays polarized in perpendicular directions, while the ray reflected from the glass is (partially) polarized. When the crystal is suitably oriented one then observes the disappearance (or strong attenuation) of one of the two rays. The phenomenon of polarization displays the vector nature of light waves, a property which is shared by shear sound waves: in an isotropic crystal, a sound wave can correspond either to a vibration transverse to the direction of propagation, i.e., a shear wave, or to a longitudinal vibration, i.e., a compression wave. In the case of light the vibration is only transverse: the electric field of a light wave is orthogonal to the propagation direction.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006