A magneto-optic effect is any one of a number of phenomena in which an electromagnetic wave propagates through a medium that has been altered by the presence of a quasistatic magnetic field. In such a medium, which is also called gyrotropic or gyromagnetic, left- and right-rotating elliptical polarizations can propagate at different speeds, leading to a number of important phenomena. When light is transmitted through a layer of magneto-optic material, the result is called the Faraday effect: the plane of polarization can be rotated, forming a Faraday rotator. The results of reflection from a magneto-optic material are known as the magneto-optic Kerr effect (not to be confused with the nonlinear Kerr effect).
In general, magneto-optic effects break time reversal symmetry locally (i.e. when only the propagation of light, and not the source of the magnetic field, is considered) as well as Lorentz reciprocity, which is a necessary condition to construct devices such as optical isolators (through which light passes in one direction but not the other).
Two gyrotropic materials with reversed rotation directions of the two principal polarizations, corresponding to complex-conjugate ε tensors for lossless media, are called optical isomers.
In particular, in a magneto-optic material the presence of a magnetic field (either externally applied or because the material itself is ferromagnetic) can cause a change in the permittivity tensor ε of the material. The ε becomes anisotropic, a 3×3 matrix, with complex off-diagonal components, depending on the frequency ω of incident light. If the absorption losses can be neglected, ε is a Hermitian matrix. The resulting principal axes become complex as well, corresponding to elliptically-polarized light where left- and right-rotating polarizations can travel at different speeds (analogous to birefringence).
More specifically, for the case where absorption losses can be neglected, the most general form of Hermitian ε is:
\varepsilon=\begin{pmatrix} \varepsilonxx'&\varepsilonxy'+igz&\varepsilonxz'-igy\\ \varepsilonxy'-igz&\varepsilonyy'&\varepsilonyz'+igx\\ \varepsilonxz'+igy&\varepsilonyz'-igx&\varepsilonzz'\\ \end{pmatrix}
or equivalently the relationship between the displacement field D and the electric field E is:
D=\varepsilonE=\varepsilon'E+iE x g
where
\varepsilon'
g=(gx,gy,gz)
\varepsilon'
g=\varepsilon0\chi(m)H
where
\chi(m)
The simplest case to analyze is the one in which g is a principal axis (eigenvector) of
\varepsilon'
\varepsilon'
\varepsilon=\begin{pmatrix} \varepsilon1&+igz&0\\ -igz&\varepsilon1&0\\ 0&0&\varepsilon2\\ \end{pmatrix}
1/\sqrt{\mu(\varepsilon1\pmgz)}
For light propagating purely perpendicular to the axis of gyration, the properties are known as the Cotton-Mouton effect and used for a Circulator.
Kerr rotation and Kerr ellipticity are changes in the polarization of incident light which comes in contact with a gyromagnetic material. Kerr rotation is a rotation in the plane of polarization of transmitted light, and Kerr ellipticity is the ratio of the major to minor axis of the ellipse traced out by elliptically polarized light on the plane through which it propagates. Changes in the orientation of polarized incident light can be quantified using these two properties.
According to classical physics, the speed of light varies with the permittivity of a material:
vp=
1 | |
\sqrt{\epsilon\mu |
where
vp
\epsilon
\mu
This can be better understood if we consider a wave of light that is circularly polarized (seen to the right). If this wave interacts with a material at which the horizontal component (green sinusoid) travels at a different speed than the vertical component (blue sinusoid), the two components will fall out of the 90 degree phase difference (required for circular polarization) changing the Kerr ellipticity.
A change in Kerr rotation is most easily recognized in linearly polarized light, which can be separated into two circularly polarized components: Left-handed circular polarized (LHCP) light and right-handed circular polarized (RHCP) light. The anisotropy of the magneto-optic material permittivity causes a difference in the speed of LHCP and RHCP light, which will cause a change in the angle of polarized light. Materials that exhibit this property are known as birefringent.
From this rotation, we can calculate the difference in orthogonal velocity components, find the anisotropic permittivity, find the gyration vector, and calculate the applied magnetic field[1]
H