fotoelasticity
Fotoelasticity, commonly spelled photoelasticity, is an experimental method for visualizing and measuring internal stresses in transparent materials by using stress-induced birefringence. When such a specimen is loaded and viewed between polarizers, distinctive fringe patterns reveal the stress state.
Principle: Under plane stress, the material develops birefringence with a principal index difference Δn proportional to
Methods: A plane polariscope (two linear polarizers) yields qualitative fringe patterns; a circular polariscope (polarizer, quarter-wave
Applications and limitations: Used in engineering to study stresses in transparent components, plastics, and laminated composites
See also: birefringence, stress optics, polariscope, isochromatic and isoclinic fringes.