Wm. Mcclain et al., MEASUREMENT OF THE MUELLER SCATTERING MATRIX BY USE OF OPTICAL BEATS FROM A ZEEMAN LASER, Applied optics, 33(7), 1994, pp. 1230-1241
A two-frequency beam from a Zeeman laser scatters elastically from an
isotropic medium, such as randomly oriented viruses or other particles
suspended in water. The Zeeman effect splits the laser line by 250 kH
z, and beats can be seen electronically in the signal from a phototube
that views the scattered light. There are independently rotatable hal
f-wave and quarter-wave retardation plates in the incident beam and a
similar pair in the observed scattered beam, plus a fixed linear polar
izer directly in front of the detector. Each of the four retarders has
two angular positions, providing a total of 16 possible polarization
cases. For each of the 16 cases, there are three data to be collected:
(1) the average total intensity of the scattered light, (2) the ampli
tude of the beats in the scattered light, and (3) the phase shift betw
een the beats of the scattered light and those of a reference signal f
rom the laser. When a singular value decomposition technique is used,
these threefold redundant data are rapidly transformed into a best-fit
4 x 4 Mueller scattering matrix. We discuss several different measure
ment strategies and their systematic and statistical errors. We presen
t experimental results for two kinds of particle of wavelength size: p
olystyrene spheres and tobacco mosaic virus. In both cases the achiral
retardation element M34 of the Mueller matrix is easily measurable.