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dichroism
the property of some anisotropic materials of having different absorption coefficients for light polarized in different directions; circular dichroism
Dichroism has two related but distinct meanings in optics. A dichroic material is either one which causes visible light to be split up into distinct beams of different wavelengths (colours) (not to be confused with dispersion), or one in which light rays having different polarizations are absorbed by different amounts
The property of presenting different colors by transmitted light, when viewed in two different directions, the colors being unlike in the direction of unlike or unequal axes
the property of some crystals of transmitting different colours of light in different directions
Refers to the selective difference in absorption between the two orthogonal components of the polarization state of light propagating in a given direction in an anisotropic medium Generally applied to linearly polarized light This is how a sheet polarizer works with one direction of polarization transmitted and the perpendicular directions absorbed Circular dichroism describes the corresponding effect for circularly polarized light where one "handedness" of circularly polarized light is absorbed more strongly than the opposite "handedness " Solutions of chiral molecules will produce this effect as will cholesteric liquid crystals for wavelengths well removed from the pitch value
pleochroism of a crystal so that it exhibits two different colors when viewed from two different directions
{i} doubling of colors, optical phenomenon in which a material exhibits two different colors when viewed under different conditions
Dichroism is the property of having more than one color, especially when viewed from different angles Many minerals (like rubies and axinite) are naturally dichroic This effect can be artificially caused by a thin layer of a metallic oxides that is deposited on the surface of a material Dichroic coated glass transmits some wavelengths of light and reflecting others, giving it an opal-like appearance
the property of a substance to show two different effects under different viewing circumstances For example, some colors appear different when applied using horizontal strokes than when applied using vertical strokes
A property of certain crystalline substances in which one polarized component of incident light is absorbed and the other is transmitted
ikirenklilik
dichroism