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Excelitas Technologies Corp. - X-Cite Vitae LB 11/24

Mantis shrimps see circularly polarized light

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Kevin Robinson

Polarized vision is common in the animal kingdom; however, most organisms that are sensitive to polarized light detect linear polarization. Now a group of researchers has shown that a sea creature called a mantis shrimp can see and make use of circularly polarized light. The mantis shrimp is not really a shrimp. It is a stomatopod that got its name from the fact that it resembles a combination of a praying mantis and shrimp. For scientists, the stomatopod’s eyes are particularly interesting because of their complexity. For example, they provide tunable, eight-channel color vision. Each eye...Read full article

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    Published: May 2008
    Glossary
    linear polarization
    Linear polarization refers to the polarization state of light where the electric field oscillates in a single plane as the light propagates through space. In other words, the electric field vector of linearly polarized light vibrates along a specific axis, defining the orientation of the polarization. Linear polarization can occur in any direction relative to the propagation axis, resulting in horizontal, vertical, diagonal, or any intermediate orientation. Mathematically, linear...
    Biophotonicslinear polarizationMicroscopyNews & Featuresorganismspolarized visionSensors & Detectors

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