Malabar Front wrote:
Remember with circular polarizers, you have to rotate the filter to vary its effect (it's like a grid, essentially, blocking certain frequencies of light, or some science shit).
You rang, I came, with all the TRAPPINGS OF A MAN OF SCIENCE.
All light has a polarisation. Pretend for a moment that each beam of light is an individual sine wave travelling through space. The polarisation plane is the direction in which the light goes up and down, and it's at right angles to the direction of propagation.
Polarising filters are like combs, they only let light through where the plane of polarisation matches the gap in the comb.
Normal light has all sorts of polarisations, at random. Putting a filter in the way of this blocks some of the light (where the polarisation is different). This is why it works as a weak neutral density filter. Putting a second filter behind the first and rotating it so the direction is 90 degrees away from the first will block all light and turn black, although that's not useful for photography.
Light reflected from a metallic or watery surface all has the same polarisation, and hence putting a polarising filter in the way of that light and rotating it correctly can block the reflection. Suddenly, a pool of water which looks like a mirror without the filter will become transparent, and you can see into the water instead.
Now to hit Submit and discover someone has linked to Wikipedia. (pause) wow, got away with it.