Optical Thickness
Definition: a measure either for the absorption or the effective optical path length of a sample
German: optische Dicke
Units: m or dimensionless number
How to cite the article; suggest additional literature
Author: Dr. RĂ¼diger Paschotta
The term “optical thickness” is ambiguous, as two totally different definitions occur in the literature:
- The optical thickness of a light-absorbing medium is its geometrical thickness times its intensity attenuation coefficient. For example, an optical thickness of 1 implies that the transmitted power is reduced to 1/e (≈ 37%) of its original value. This definition is often used e.g. in atmospheric optics. It is larger than the optical density by the factor ln 10 ∼ 2.303.
- The optical thickness of a transparent medium is sometimes understood to be the same as the optical path length, which is its geometric thickness multiplied by the refractive index. This is the quantity which determines the phase delay for light passing through the medium and is therefore relevant e.g. in interferometers.
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See also: optical density, refractive index, interferometers
and other articles in the category general optics
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