To get a fuller picture of the interaction between light and optical media, we must turn to another model of light:
Electromagnetic waves.
This is where the physics becomes more complete — and more revealing.
Maxwell’s equations govern the propagation of electromagnetic waves. One direct consequence of these equations is this:
When a wave is incident upon an interface between two optical media — for example, light traveling from air into a polymer optical surface — two things happen simultaneously:
One portion of the light is refracted into the second medium.
Another portion is reflected back into the incident medium.
The mathematical relationships used to calculate how much light is reflected and transmitted are known as the Fresnel equations.
This is not a defect. It is physics.
For typical materials used in visible-light systems — polymers and glasses — approximately:
4% to 5% of incident light is reflected at each interface.
That sounds small. It isn’t.
Consider a simple example. Imagine a system with four air-spaced lenses.
That creates:
If 4% of the light is reflected at each interface, the fractional transmitted energy in the main image becomes:
0.96⁸ ≈ 0.72
That means: Only about 72% of the original light is transmitted directly to the image.
In other words: Less than 75% of the light is being used to form the image you actually want.
The rest is lost to Fresnel reflection.
That missing 28% does not simply disappear. Some of it:
Bounces through the system
Reaches the image plane
Reduces contrast
Produces ghost images
Creates out-of-focus artifacts
So Fresnel reflection does two things at once:
Reduces image brightness
Degrades image quality
In precision optical systems — especially those with multiple elements — this cumulative effect becomes significant.
In injection-molded polymer optics, this phenomenon becomes even more important because:
Multi-element systems are common
Surface quality affects scatter, which also reduces contrast
Coatings may not always be present or optimized
Manufacturing variability can amplify small losses
Understanding Fresnel reflection is not theoretical. It directly impacts:
Ray tracing gives us the design intent and expected performance. Wave optics gives us energy behavior. Both models are useful. Neither is complete alone.
Ignoring Fresnel reflection because it isn’t visible in a simple ray trace is how optical systems can quietly lose performance. Multi-element assemblies are particularly sensitive to cumulative effects.
The physics does not care whether the part passed surface inspection. It only cares about interfaces