Issues

 / 

1977

 / 

January

  

Reviews of topical problems


The light ray (contribution to the theory of the light field)

The electrodynamic aspects of the concept of the light ray, of the principal concepts and laws of photometry, polarimetry, and ray optics as a unified approximation of actual optics are explained. The apparatus-related origin of these concepts is demonstrated and the structure of the general theory of the light field is explained, including algebraic optics and the theory of radiative transfer. The principal premise of the ``photometric'' or ``ray'' approximation is the concept of the wavelet or the wave packet, the energy and the dynamic parameters of which are defined essentially in frequency-momentum rather than coordinate-time representation. The ray (photometric) approximation operates exclusively with observable quantities that are connected with the finite character of the dimensions and characteristic times of the square-law receivers used in optics. The generalization of photometric, polarimetric, and ray concepts to include a radiation field of arbitrary structure follows from the fact that the action of such a field on an \emph{optical} receiver is equivalent to the action on this receiver of a beam of incoherent wavelets, the region of coherence of which is determined by the parameters of the receiver. This makes it possible to regard the field as an aggregate of light rays, each of which is described in a photometric approximation generalized with allowance for the polarization effects (Stokes parameters), which leads to formulation of the principal laws of photometry and polarimetry, and also to the photometric formulation of the conservation laws, and makes it possible to establish a direct relation between photopolarimetry and general theory of coherence. The limited nature of the region of coherence of the wavelet train leads to the problem of its transformation in time and in space, the description of which is effected by methods of algebraic optics by introducing the operators of differential and local transformations of the ray, and this leads directly to formulation of the radiative-transfer equation and to a delineation of the limits of its applicability. It is shown that the Stokes parameters are insufficient for a complete physical and mathematical description of the light ray, and it is necessary to introduce the three-dimensional distribution function of the wavelet trains over the polarization states; the problem of spin spectroscopy, i.e., of spatial selection of incoherent trains in accordance with the state of their polarization, is discussed.

PACS: 42.10.Dy, 42.10.Mg, 42.10.Nh
DOI: 10.1070/PU1977v020n01ABEH005317
URL: https://ufn.ru/en/articles/1977/1/c/
Citation: Rozenberg G V "The light ray (contribution to the theory of the light field)" Sov. Phys. Usp. 20 55–80 (1977)
BibTexBibNote ® (generic)BibNote ® (RIS)MedlineRefWorks

Оригинал: Розенберг Г В «Луч света (К теории светового поля)» УФН 121 97–138 (1977); DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0121.197701c.0097

Cited by (27) ↓ Similar articles (20)

  1. Budak V P, Zheltov V S L&E (06-2023) 22 (2023)
  2. Budak V P, Grimaylo A V L&E (06-2023) 65 (2023)
  3. Lubenchenko A V, Lubenchenko O I L&E (04-2022) 31 (2022)
  4. Shen Y J. Opt. 23 124004 (2021)
  5. Budak V P, Aizenberg Ju B L&E (01-2021) 4 (2021)
  6. Budak V P, Grimaylo A V L&E (01-2020) 108 (2020)
  7. Tracheva N, Ukhinov S Stat Papers 59 1541 (2018)
  8. Mishchenko M I Journal Of Quantitative Spectroscopy And Radiative Transfer 146 4 (2014)
  9. Bukshtab M Springer Series In Optical Sciences Vol. Applied Photometry, Radiometry, and Measurements of Optical LossesRadiometric and Photometric Quantities and Notions163 Chapter 1 (2012) p. 3
  10. Bukshtab M Springer Series In Optical Sciences Vol. Applied Photometry, Radiometry, and Measurements of Optical LossesRadiometry of Partially Coherent Radiation163 Chapter 3 (2012) p. 129
  11. Budak V P, Klyuykov D A, Korkin S V Light Scattering Reviews 5 Chapter 5 (2010) p. 147
  12. Rogovtsov N N Light Scattering Reviews 5 Chapter 7 (2010) p. 249
  13. Savenkov S N, Marienko V V et al Phys. Rev. E 74 (5) (2006)
  14. Torre A Linear Ray and Wave Optics in Phase Space (2005) p. 1
  15. Kravtsov Yu A, Apresyan L A Progress In Optics Vol. 36 (1996) p. 179
  16. Belyakov V A Diffraction Optics of Complex-Structured Periodic Media Partially Ordered Systems Chapter 8 (1992) p. 244
  17. Pedersen H M J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 8 176 (1991)
  18. Mishchenko M I Transport Theory And Statistical Physics 19 293 (1990)
  19. Pedersen H M Coherence and Quantum Optics VI Chapter 160 (1990) p. 883
  20. Baranovskii A M Combust Explos Shock Waves 26 307 (1990)
  21. Zuev V E J Russ Laser Res 8 283 (1987)
  22. Vereshchagin V G, Ponyavina A N J Appl Spectrosc 43 1163 (1985)
  23. Kuz’min V N J Russ Laser Res 5 118 (1984)
  24. Aleksandrov E I, Tsipilev V P Combust Explos Shock Waves 19 505 (1983)
  25. Dolin L S Radiophys Quantum Electron 23 236 (1980)
  26. Prisbivalko A P, Kuz’min V N et al J Appl Spectrosc 33 975 (1980)
  27. Barkovskii L M J Appl Spectrosc 30 77 (1979)

© 1918–2024 Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk
Email: ufn@ufn.ru Editorial office contacts About the journal Terms and conditions