The case shown in Fig. 14.7 is linearly polarized,
which means simply that the
and
fields are in
specific fixed directions.
Of course, the directions of
and
could be interchanged,
giving the ``opposite'' polarization.
Polaroid sunglasses transmit the light waves with
vertical
(which are not reflected efficiently off horizontal surfaces)
and absorb the light waves with
horizontal (which are),
thus reducing ``glare'' (reflected light from horizontal surfaces)
without blocking out all light.
There is another possibility, namely that the two linear polarizations
be superimposed so that both the
and
vectors rotate around the direction of propagation
,
remaining always perpendicular to
and to each other.
This is known as circular polarization. It too comes in
two versions, right circular polarization and left
circular polarization, referring to the hand whose fingers curl
in the direction of the rotation if the thumb points along
.