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Crystal optics is the
branch of
optics that describes the
behaviour of
light in
anisotropic media, that
is, media (such as
crystals) in which light
behaves differently depending on
which direction the light is
propagating. Crystals are often
naturally anisotropic, and in some
media (such as
liquid crystals) it is
possible to induce anisotropy by
applying e.g. an external electric
field.
Isotropic media
Typical transparent media such
as
glasses are
isotropic, which means
that light behaves the same way no
matter which direction it is
travelling in the medium. In terms
of
Maxwell's equations in a
dielectric, this gives a
relationship between the
electric displacement field
D and the
electric field E:
-

where ε0 is the
permittivity of free space and
P is the electric
polarisation (the
vector field corresponding to
electric
dipole moments present in the
medium). Physically, the
polarisation field can be regarded
as the response of the medium to
the electric field of the light.
Electric susceptibility
In an
isotropic and
linear medium, this
polarisation field P is
proportional to and parallel to
the electric field E:
-

where χ is the
electric susceptibility of
the medium. The relation between
D and E is thus:
-

where
-

is the
dielectric constant of the
medium. The value √(1+χ) is called
the relative permittivity
of the medium, and is related to
the
refractive index n, for
non-magnetic media, by
-

Anisotropic media
In an anisotropic medium, such
as a crystal, the polarisation
field P is not necessarily
aligned with the electric field of
the light E. In a physical
picture, this can be thought of as
the dipoles induced in the medium
by the electric field having
certain preferred directions,
related to the physical structure
of the crystal. This can be
written as:
-

Here χ is not a number
as before but a
tensor of rank 2, the
electric susceptibility tensor.
In terms of components in 3
dimensions:

or using the summation
convention:
-

Since χ is a tensor,
P is not necessarily colinear
with E.
From
thermodynamic arguments it can
be shown that χij
= χji, i.e. the
χ tensor is
symmetric. In accordance with
the
spectral theorem, it is thus
possible to
diagonalise the tensor by
choosing the appropriate set of
coordinate axes, zeroing all
components of the tensor except χxx,
χyy and χzz.
This gives the set of relations:
-

-

-

The directions x, y and z are
in this case known as the
principal axes of the medium.
It follows that D and
E are also related by a
tensor:
-

Here ε is known as the
relative permittivity tensor
or dielectric tensor.
Consequently, the
refractive index of the medium
must also be a tensor. Consider a
light wave propagating along the z
principal axis
polarised such the electric
field of the wave is parallel to
the x-axis. The wave experiences a
susceptibility χxx and
a permittivity εxx. The
refractive index is thus:
-

For a wave polarised in the y
direction:
-

Thus these waves will see two
different refractive indices and
travel at different speeds. This
phenomenon is known as
birefringence and occurs
in some common crystals such as
calcite and
quartz.
If χxx = χyy
≠ χzz, the crystal is
known as uniaxial. If χxx
≠ χyy and χxx
≠ χzz the crystal is
called biaxial. A uniaxial
crystal exhibits two refractive
indices, an "ordinary" index (no)
for light polarised in the x or y
directions, and an "extraordinary"
index (ne) for
polarisation in the z direction. A
uniaxial crystal is "positive" if
ne > no and
"negative" if ne < no.
Light polarised at some angle to
the axes will experience a
different phase velocity for
different polarization components,
and cannot be described by a
single index of refraction. This
is often depicted as an
index ellipsoid.
Other effects
Certain
nonlinear optical phenomena
such as the
electro-optic effect cause a
variation of a medium's
permittivity tensor when an
external electric field is
applied, proportional (to lowest
order) to the strength of the
field. This causes a rotation of
the principal axes of the medium
and alters the behaviour of light
travelling through it; the effect
can be used to produce light
modulators.
In response to a
magnetic field, some materials
can have a dielectric tensor that
is complex-Hermitian;
this is called a gyro-magnetic or
magneto-optic effect. In this
case, the
principal axes are
complex-valued vectors,
corresponding to elliptically
polarized light, and time-reversal
symmetry can be broken. This can
be used to design optical
isolators, for example.
(A dielectric tensor that is
not Hermitian gives rise to
complex eigenvalues, which
corresponds to a material with
gain or absorption at a particular
frequency.)