Cotton–Mouton effect


In physical optics, the Cotton–Mouton effect refers to birefringence in a liquid in the presence of a constant transverse magnetic field. It is a similar but stronger effect than the Voigt effect. The electric analog is the Kerr effect.
It was discovered in 1907 by Aimé Cotton and Henri Mouton, working in collaboration.
When a linearly polarized wave propagates perpendicular to magnetic field, it can become elliptized. Because a linearly polarized wave is some combination of in-phase X & O modes, and because X & O waves propagate with different phase velocities, this causes elliptization of the emerging beam. As the waves propagate, the phase difference between EX & EO increases.