Hello everybody, for the type of product I am analyzing, I use the NSC environment where I have a LED source, an imported CAD and a detector to detect the luminance (or illuminance) of a system. In my opinion it is not necessary, in my case, to activate the "Use Polarization" flag during the analysis. Can you confirm it?
Thanks a lot.
Best answer by MichaelH
Hi Luca,
Polarization tracing in both sequential and non-sequential mode will account for both Snell’s Law ray tracing (how the ray physically travels through the system) as well as accounting for the E-Field (intensity and phase of a ray). You need polarization ray tracing if you can about:
Polarization tracing in both sequential and non-sequential mode will account for both Snell’s Law ray tracing (how the ray physically travels through the system) as well as accounting for the E-Field (intensity and phase of a ray). You need polarization ray tracing if you can about:
Polarization tracing in both sequential and non-sequential mode will account for both Snell’s Law ray tracing (how the ray physically travels through the system) as well as accounting for the E-Field (intensity and phase of a ray). You need polarization ray tracing if you can about:
Fresnel reflections off surfaces
Bulk absorption/internal transmission
Coherence analysis
Hi, thanks for the clear answer. The most classic case for my work is the transmission through turbid polymers exploiting the scatter effect. I suppose it is not necessary to activate the polarization.