Polarization Modeling and Predictions for DKIST Part 2: Application of the Berreman Calculus to Spectral Polarization Fringes of Beamsplitters and Crystal Retarders
David M. Harrington, Frans Snik, Christoph U. Keller, Stacey R. Sueoka, and Gerard van Harten

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new application of the Berreman calculus to predict polarization fringes in DKIST optics, aiding in design decisions to minimize polarization errors in solar observations.
Contribution
It presents a novel computational tool that estimates polarization fringes considering all optical design choices, manufacturing errors, and physical factors for DKIST retarder optics.
Findings
The tool accurately predicts polarization fringes matching observations.
Design modifications like removing cover windows reduce fringe amplitudes.
The method informs better coating and material choices for optical components.
Abstract
We outline polarization fringe predictions derived from a new application of the Berreman calculus for the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST) retarder optics. The DKIST retarder baseline design used 6 crystals, single-layer anti-reflection coatings, thick cover windows and oil between all optical interfaces. This new tool estimates polarization fringes and optic Mueller matrices as functions of all optical design choices. The amplitude and period of polarized fringes under design changes, manufacturing errors, tolerances and several physical factors can now be estimated. This tool compares well with observations of fringes for data collected with the SPINOR spectropolarimeter at the Dunn Solar Telescope using bi-crystalline achromatic retarders as well as laboratory tests. With this new tool, we show impacts of design decisions on polarization fringes as impacted by…
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