Abstract
IN a paper published sixteen years ago I drew attention to a peculiarity of the magnetic rotation of the plane of polarisation arising from the circumstance that the rotation is in the same absolute direction whichever way the light may be travelling. “A consequence remarkable from the theoretical point of view is the possibility of an arrangement by which the otherwise general optical law of reciprocity shall be violated. Consider, for example, a column of diamagnetic mediutu exposed to such a force that the rotation is 45°, and situated between two Nicols whose principal planes are inclined to one another at 45°. Under these circumstances light passing one way is cornpletely stopped by the second Nicol, but light passing the other way is completely transmitted. A source of light at one point A would thus be visible at a second point B, when a source at B would be invisible at A; a state of things at firsi sight1 inconsistent with the second law of thermodynamics.” (Phil. Trans. 176, p. 343, 1885; Scientific, Papers vol. ii. p. 360). It is here implied that the inconsistency is apparent only, but I did not discuss it further.
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RAYLEIGH On the Magnetic Rotation of Light and the Second Law of Thermo-Dynamics . Nature 64, 577–578 (1901). https://doi.org/10.1038/064577e0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/064577e0
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