Polaroid Vision in a Spider Experiments show that the ground spider Drassodes cu
ID: 1607178 • Letter: P
Question
Polaroid Vision in a Spider Experiments show that the ground spider Drassodes cupreus uses one of its several pairs of eyes as a polarization detector. In fact, the two eyes in this pair have polarization directions that are at right angles to one another. Suppose linearly polarized light with an intensity of 875 W/m2 shines from the sky onto the spider, and that the intensity transmitted by one of the polarizing eyes is 252 W/m2 .
Part A
For this eye, what is the angle between the polarization direction of the eye and the polarization direction of the incident light?
Part B
What is the intensity transmitted by the other polarizing eye?
I=___________W/m2
=________Explanation / Answer
The angle is
I = Io*cos^2@
@ =cos^-1{sqrt (I/Io)}
= cos^-1{sqrt (252/875)}
= 57.54 degrees
b.
Intensity is
I'=I*cos^2(90-@)
= 875*cos^2(90-57.54)
= 622.99 W/m2
= 623 W/m^2