Optical Min3
Optical Min3
Optical Min3
Part III
Slides borrowed/adapted from Jane Selverstone (University of New Mexico) and John Winter (Whitman College)
Some review
Optical mineral properties ONLY visible in PPL: Color not an interference color! (for that, see below) Pleochroism is there a color change while rotating stage? Relief low, intermediate, high, very high? Optical mineral properties visible in PPL or XPL: Cleavage number and orientation of cleavage planes (may need higher magnification and at different grains) Habit characteristic form of mineral (sometimes better in XPL) Optical mineral properties ONLY visible in XPL: Birefringence use highest order interference color to describe Twinning type of twinning, orientation Extinction angle parallel or inclined? Angle? Isotropic vs. anisotropic minerals 100% extinct in XPL? Today well break down anisotropic minerals into uniaxial or biaxial
Uniaxial and biaxial minerals can be subdivided into optically positive and optically negative, depending on the orientation of fast and slow rays relative to the xtl axes
All anisotropic minerals can resolve light into two plane polarized components that travel at different velocities and vibrate in planes that are perpendicular to one another
fast ray slow ray mineral grain When light gets split: -velocity changes -rays get bent (refracted) -2 new vibration directions -usually see new colors
lower polarizer
Fig 6-8 Bloss, Optical Crystallography, MSA Fig 6-7 Bloss, Optical Crystallography, MSA
calcite
Isotropic
Isometric
All crystallographic axes are equal
Uniaxial Biaxial
1) Choose a grain showing the lowest interference colors 2) Move to the high-powered objective lens and refocus 3) Open the sub-stage diaphragm as wide as possible 4) Insert the condenser lens 5) Cross the polars 6) Insert the Bertrand lens
or
uniaxial
If uniaxial, isogyres define cross; arms remain N-S/E-W as stage is rotated
biaxial
If biaxial, isogyres define curve that rotates with stage, or cross that breaks up as stage is rotated
biaxial
(+)
Without plate
Remember determining optic sign last week with the gypsum plate?
blue in NE = (+)
Gypsum plate has constant D of 530 nm = 1st-order pink Isogyres = black: D=0 Background = gray: D=100 Add or subtract 530 nm: 530+100=630 nm = blue = (+) 530-100=430 nm = yellowish = (-) Addition = slow + slow Subtraction = slow + fast
Isotropic indicatrix
Light travels the same distance in all directions; n is same everywhere, thus d = nhi-nlo = 0 = black
c-axis
calcite quartz
Uniaxial indicatrix
c-axis c-axis
calcite
quartz
Propagate light along the c-axis, note what happens to it in plane of thin section
nw
n
w
nw - nw = 0
ne - nw > 0
therefore, d > 0 n W
w w
ne
Grain changes color upon rotation. Grain will go black whenever indicatrix axis is E-W or N-S
ne S
clinopyroxene
feldspar
Biaxial indicatrix
(triaxial ellipsoid)
2Vz
The potato!
Alas, the potato (indicatrix) can have any orientation within a biaxial mineral olivine augite
but there are a few generalizations that we can make The potato has 3 perpendicular principal axes of different length thus, we need 3 different RIs to describe a biaxial mineral X direction = na (lowest) Y direction = nb (intermed; radius of circ. section) Z direction = ng (highest) Orthorhombic: axes of indicatrix coincide w/ xtl axes Monoclinic: Y axis coincides w/ one xtl axis Triclinic: none of the indicatrix axes coincide w/ xtl axes
Bertrand lens
What do we see??
substage condensor
(+)
(-)
Estimating 2V
OAP
(+)
2V=20
2V=40
2V=60
See Nesse p. 101
Quick review:
Indicatrix gives us a way to relate optical phenomena to crystallographic orientation, and to explain differences between grains of the same mineral in thin section hi d
lo d
Isotropic? Uniaxial? Biaxial? Sign? 2V? All of these help us to uniquely identify unknown minerals.