(Redirected from Refractive Index)The 'refractive index' (or 'index of
refraction') of a medium is a measure for how much the speed of light (or other waves such as sound waves) is reduced inside the medium. For example, typical
glass has a refractive index of 1.5, which means that light travels at
times the speed in air or vacuum. Two common properties of glass and other transparent materials are directly related to their refractive index. First, light rays change direction when they cross the interface from air to the material, an effect that is used in lenses and
glasses. Second, light reflects partially from surfaces that have a refractive index different from that of their surroundings.
Definition
The refractive index ''n'' of a medium is defined as the ratio of the
phase velocity ''c'' of a
wave phenomenon such as
light or
sound in a reference medium to the phase velocity
in the medium itself:
:
It is most commonly used in the context of
light with
vacuum as a reference medium, although historically other reference media (e.g.
air at a standardized
pressure and
temperature) have been common. It is usually given the symbol ''n''. In the case of light, it equals
:
,
where ''ε
r'' is the material's relative
permittivity, and ''μ
r'' is its relative
permeability. For most materials, ''μ
r'' is very close to 1 at optical frequencies, therefore ''n'' is approximately
. Contrary to a widespread misconception, ''n'' may be less than 1, for example for
x-rays.
[1]. This has practical technical applications, such as effective mirrors for x-rays based on
total external reflection.
The
phase velocity is defined as the rate at which the crests of the
waveform propagate; that is, the rate at which the
phase of the waveform is moving. The ''
group velocity'' is the rate that the ''envelope'' of the waveform is propagating; that is, the rate of variation of the
amplitude of the waveform. Provided the waveform is not distorted significantly during propagation, it is the group velocity that represents the rate that information (and energy) may be transmitted by the wave, for example the velocity at which a pulse of light travels down an
optical fiber.
The speed of light

Refraction of light at the interface between two media of different refractive indices, with n
2 > n
1. Since the phase velocity is lower in the second medium (v
2 < v
1), the angle of refraction θ
2 is less than the angle of incidence θ
1; that is, the ray in the higher-index medium is closer to the normal.
The speed of all electromagnetic radiation in vacuum is the same, approximately 3×10
8 meters per second, and is denoted by
''c''.
Therefore, if ''v'' is the
phase velocity of radiation of a specific frequency in a specific material, the refractive index is given by
:
.
This number is typically greater than one: the higher the index of the material, the more the light is slowed down. However, at certain frequencies (e.g. near
absorption resonances, and for
X-rays), ''n'' will actually be smaller than one. This does not contradict the
theory of relativity, which holds that no
information-carrying signal can ever propagate faster than ''c'', because the
phase velocity is not the same as the
group velocity or the
signal velocity.
Sometimes, a "group velocity refractive index", usually called the ''group index'' is defined:
:
where ''v
g'' is the group velocity. This value should not be confused with ''n'', which is always defined with respect to the phase velocity. The group index can be written in terms of the wavelength dependence of the refractive index as
:
where
is the wavelength in vacuum.
At the microscale, an electromagnetic wave's phase velocity is slowed in a material because the
electric field creates a disturbance in the charges of each atom (primarily the
electrons) proportional to the
permittivity of the medium. The charges will, in general, oscillate slightly out of
phase with respect to the driving electric field. The charges thus radiate their own electromagnetic wave that is at the same frequency but with a phase delay. The macroscopic sum of all such contributions in the material is a wave with the same frequency but shorter wavelength than the original, leading to a slowing of the wave's phase velocity. Most of the radiation from oscillating material charges will modify the incoming wave, changing its velocity. However, some net energy will be radiated in other directions (see
scattering).
If the refractive indices of two materials are known for a given frequency, then one can compute the angle by which radiation of that frequency will be
refracted as it moves from the first into the second material from
Snell's law.
If in a given region the values of refractive indices ''n'' or ''n
g'' were found to differ from unity (whether homogeniously, or isotropically, or not), then this region was distinct from vacuum in the above sense for lacking
Poincaré symmetry.
Negative Refractive Index
Recent research has also demonstrated the existence of
negative refractive index which can occur if
the real parts of both
and
are ''simultaneously'' negative, although that is a sufficient but not necessary
condition. Not thought to occur naturally, this can be achieved with so called
metamaterials and offers the possibility of perfect lenses and other exotic phenomena such as a reversal of
Snell's law.
[1] [2]
Dispersion and absorption

The variation of refractive index vs. wavelength for various glasses.
In real materials, the
polarization does not respond instantaneously to an applied field. This causes
dielectric loss, which can be expressed by a
permittivity that is both
complex and
frequency dependent. Real materials are not perfect
insulators either, i.e. they have non-zero
direct current conductivity. Taking both aspects into consideration, we can define a complex index of refraction:
:
Here, ''n'' is the refractive index indicating the phase velocity as above, while ''κ'' is called the
extinction coefficient, which indicates the amount of
absorption loss when the electromagnetic wave propagates through the material. Both ''n'' and ''κ'' are dependent on the frequency (
wavelength).
The effect that ''n'' varies with
frequency (except in vacuum, where all frequencies travel at the same speed, ''c'') is known as
dispersion, and it is what causes a
prism to divide white light into its constituent spectral
colors, explains
rainbows, and is the cause of
chromatic aberration in
lenses. In regions of the spectrum where the material does not absorb, the real part of the refractive index tends to increase with frequency. Near absorption peaks, the curve of the refractive index is a complex form given by the
Kramers-Kronig relations, and can decrease with frequency.
Since the refractive index of a material varies with the frequency (and thus wavelength) of light, it is usual to specify the corresponding vacuum wavelength at which the refractive index is measured. Typically, this is done at various well-defined spectral
emission lines; for example, ''n''
D is the refractive index at the
Fraunhofer "D" line, the centre of the yellow
sodium double emission at 589.29
nm wavelength.
The
Sellmeier equation is an empirical formula that works well in describing dispersion, and Sellmeier coefficients are often quoted instead of the refractive index in tables. For some representative refractive indices at different wavelengths, see
list of indices of refraction.
As shown above, dielectric loss and non-zero DC conductivity in materials cause absorption. Good dielectric materials such as glass have extremely low DC conductivity, and at low frequencies the dielectric loss is also negligible, resulting in almost no absorption (κ ≈ 0). However, at higher frequencies (such as visible light), dielectric loss may increase absorption significantly, reducing the material's
transparency to these frequencies.
The real and imaginary parts of the complex refractive index are related through use of the
Kramers-Kronig relations. For example, one can determine a material's full complex refractive index as a function of wavelength from an absorption spectrum of the material.
Anisotropy

A calcite crystal laid upon a paper with some letters showing
birefringence
The refractive index of certain media may be different depending on the
polarization and direction of propagation of the light through the medium. This is known as
birefringence or anisotropy and is described by the field of
crystal optics. In the most general case, the ''
dielectric constant'' is a rank-2
tensor (a 3 by 3 matrix), which cannot simply be described by refractive indices except for polarizations along principal axes.
In magneto-optic (gyro-magnetic) and
optically active materials, the principal axes are complex (corresponding to elliptical polarizations), and the dielectric tensor is complex-
Hermitian (for lossless media); such materials break time-reversal symmetry and are used e.g. to construct
Faraday isolators.
Nonlinearity
The strong
electric field of high intensity light (such as output of a
laser) may cause a medium's refractive index to vary as the light passes through it, giving rise to
nonlinear optics. If the index varies quadratically with the field (linearly with the intensity), it is called the
optical Kerr effect and causes phenomena such as
self-focusing and
self phase modulation. If the index varies linearly with the field (which is only possible in materials that do not possess
inversion symmetry), it is known as the
Pockels effect.
Inhomogeneity

A gradient-index lens with a parabolic variation of refractive index (''n'') with radial distance (''x''). The lens focuses light in the same way as a conventional lens.
If the refractive index of a medium is not constant, but varies gradually with position, the material is known as a gradient-index medium and is described by
gradient index optics. Light travelling through such a medium can be bent or focussed, and this effect can be exploited to produce
lenses, some
optical fibers and other devices. Some common
mirages are caused by a spatially-varying refractive index of
air.
Applications
The refractive index of a material is the most important property of any
optical system that uses
refraction. It is used to calculate the focusing power of lenses, and the dispersive power of prisms.
Since refractive index is a fundamental physical property of a substance, it is often used to identify a particular substance, confirm its purity, or measure its concentration. Refractive index is used to measure solids (glasses and gemstones), liquids, and gases. Most commonly it is used to measure the concentration of a
solute in an
aqueous solution. A
refractometer is the instrument used to measure refractive index. For a solution of sugar, the refractive index can be used to determine the sugar content (see
Brix).
See also
★
List of refractive indices
★
Optical properties of water and ice
★
Sellmeier equation
★
Total internal reflection
★
Negative refractive index or
Metamaterial
★
Index-matching material
★
Birefringence
External links
★
Dielectric materials
★
Science World
References
1. Tanya M. Sansosti, Compound Refractive Lenses for X-Rays. 2002