How Do You See Objects? Your Eyes Can Change Focus Automatically; It Is a Complex Structure

How Do You See Objects? Your Eyes Can Change Focus Automatically; It Is a Complex Structure

15.4 Seeing Light

How do you see objects? Your eyes can change focus automatically; it is a complex structure with many parts. Each part plays a role in vision You see object when a process occurs that involves your eyes and your brain.

Light enters the eye – Light enters the eye through the transparent front surface called the cornea. The cornea protects the eye and also acts as a lens to help focus light rays.

After passing through the cornea, light enters the pupil, the part of the eye that looks black. The pupil is an opening through which light enters the inside of the eye. In dim light, the pupil becomes larger to allow in more light. In bright light, the pupil becomes smaller to allow in less light.

The iris is a ring of muscle that contracts and expands to change the size of the pupil. The iris gives the eye its color.

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An image forms – after entering the pupil, the light passes through the lens. The lens is a convex lens that refracts light to form an image on the lining of your eyeball. Muscles, called ciliary muscles, hold the lens in place behind the pupil. When you focus on a distant object, the ciliary muscles relax, and the lens becomes longer and thinner. When you focus on a nearby object, the muscles contract, and the lens becomes shorter and thicker.

When the cornea and the lens refract light, an up-side down image is formed on the retina. The retina is a layer of cells that lines the inside of the eyeball. Rods are cells that contain a pigment that responds to small amounts of light. The rods allow you to see in dim light. Cones are cells that respond to color. They may detect red light, green light, or blue light (Remember – all colors of light are made up of those three colors!) Cones respond best in bright light. Both rods and cones help change images on the retina into signals that then travel to the brain.

A signal goes to the brain – the rods and cones send signals to the brain along a short, thick nerve called the optic nerve. The optic nerve begins at the blind spot, an area of the retina that has no rods or cones. Your brain interprets the signals from the optic nerve as an upright image.

Correcting Vision – If the eyeball is slightly too long or too short, the image on the retina is out of focus. Wearing glasses or contact lenses can correct this type of vision problem.

A nearsighted person can see nearby thing clearly, but objects at a distance are blurred. The eyeball is too long, so the lens focuses the image in front of the retina. To correct this, a concave lens in front of the eye spreads out light rays before they enter the eye. As a result, then reaches the retina.

A farsighted person can see distant objects clearly, but nearby objects appear blurry. The eyeball is too short, so the image that falls on the retina is out of focus. A convex lens corrects this by bending light rays toward each other before they enter the eye, so then the image focuses on the retina.

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15.5 Using Light – how do camera, telescopes and microscopes work?

Cameras – a camera records an image of an object. A film camera records the image on film. A digital camera records the image electronically on a sensor. The lenses in a camera focus the light to form a real, upside-down image in the back of the camera. In many cameras, the lenses focus automatically.

To take a photo with a digital camera, you press halfway down on a button called the shutter release. The camera automatically adjusts the amount of light that his the sensor by changing the size of its opening. The camera also adjusts the amount of time that the sensor is exposed to light. When you press all the way down on the shutter release, the camera records the final image.

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Telescopes – a telescope forms enlarged images of distant objects. Telescopes use lenses or mirrors to collect and focus light from distant objects in space.

There are two main types of telescopes: refracting and reflecting

Refracting telescope – consists of two convex lenses, one at each end of a tube. The larger lens is called the objective. The objective gathers the light coming from an object and focuses the rays to form a real image. The convex lens close to your eye is called the eyepiece, which magnifies the image so you can see it clearly. The image you see is upside down.

A reflecting telescope uses a large concave mirror to gather light. The mirror collects light from distant objects and focuses the rays to form a real image. A small, plane mirror inside the telescope reflects the image to the eyepiece. The images you see through a reflecting telescope are upside down.

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Microscopes – to look at small, nearby objects, you would use a microscope. A microscope forms enlarged images of tiny objects. A microscope uses a combination of lenses to produce and magnify an image.

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