.
c. This mechanism can be used to trap light in a
waveguide.
d. This is the basic principle behind
fiber optics in which light is guided along a high index glass
core in a lower index glass
cladding. The basic principles behind optical waveguides can be described using the concepts of
geometrical or ray optics, as illustrated in the diagram. Light passing into a medium with higher
refractive index bends toward the normal by the process of
refraction (Figure
a.). Take, for example, light passing from air into glass. Similarly, light traveling in the opposite direction (from glass into air) takes the same path, bending away from the normal. This is a consequence of
time-reversal symmetry. Each ray in air (black) can be mapped to a ray in the glass (blue), as shown in Figure
b. There is a one-to-one correspondence. But because of refraction, some of the rays in the glass are left out (red). The remaining rays are trapped in the glass by a process called
total internal reflection. They are incident on the glass-air interface at an angle above the
critical angle. These extra rays correspond to a higher
density of states in more-advanced formulations based on the
Green's function. Using total internal reflection, light can be trapped and guided in a dielectric waveguide (Figure
c). The red rays bounce off both the top and bottom surface of the high index medium. They're guided even if the slab curves or bends, so long as it bends slowly. This is the basic principle behind
fiber optics in which light is guided along a high index glass
core in a lower index glass
cladding (Figure
d). Ray optics only gives a rough picture of how waveguides work.
Maxwell's equations can be solved by analytical or numerical methods for a full-field description of a dielectric waveguide. ==Dielectric slab waveguide==