Subject: | Re: [OM] Identifying a filter and how to use it |
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From: | Lars Bergquist <timberwolf@xxxxxxxxxx> |
Date: | Fri, 17 Apr 1998 19:17:57 +0000 |
Wrote Ian Stewart: >I don't understand this (perhaps because I don't yet have a >polarizing filter). I thought that the idea of a 'circular' >polarizer was that there is no need to rotate the thing, and >therefore it can be screwed on to the front of a zoom or whatever? >If so, then why is there a triangle mark and instructions about >rotating it? Don't feel dumb--this is a bit complicated. When light has passed trough a linear polarizer, it is (you guessed it) linearly polarized, i.e. all the waves wave in the same direction. (Light waves are transversal, at 90 degrees to the direction of propagation, not longi- tudinal like sound waves.) Now, light is also partly polarized when it passes through a semi-silvered mirror. Many TTL metering cameras meter light which has gone through a semi-silvered spot on the main mirror. If by chance the two directions of polarization are close to 90 degrees from each other, the light will be partially extinguished and the meter will give an incorrect value. A circular filter polarizes light in two directions at a right angle to each other, so that this effect disappears. But in order to get a pola effect on the subject, you must rotate the filter just as with a linear polarizer! Vänliga hälsningar/Best regards Lars Bergquist Välkommen till/Welcome to ... <http://www.bahnhof.se/~timberwolf/> <thismessagewasdeliveredviatheolympusmailinglist> <forquestions,mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <webpage:http://zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright/olympuslist.html> |
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