Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/06/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> You have to realize the way a polarizer works is not going to give you a > uniform effect. The reason is, the amount of polarization differs depending > on how far off axis from the light source you are looking.... Hi Group - Right, sort of. What Eric is saying holds true for naturally occuring polarized light. The way to check this polarizer is to use the light from a cloudy sky or from a diffused light source, put a linear polarizer in front of your camera polarizer. Now you can test your polarizer to your hearts content. You can get a linear polarizer from Edmund Scientific for a couple of dollars. Or use one lens from a pair of polarizing sunglasses. You could also use circular polarizers. But I have to think about this a bit longer, whether the orientation of the polarizer axis (normal to the polarizer) would matter. Does anybody know whether the Leitz polarizer is a circular polarizer or a linear one? -- Wolfgang |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| | Wolfgang Sachse Phone: +1/607/255-5065 | | Theoretical and Applied Mechanics E-mail: sachse@msc.cornell.edu | | Cornell University FAX: +1/607/255-9179 | | Ithaca, NY - 14853-1503 USA Department Secretary: 607/255-5062 | | WWW Home Page http://www.msc.cornell.edu/~sachse | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~