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3.1: Anatomy and function

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    Light enters at the cornea, then traverses the aqueous humour, passes through the pupil, which limits the power entering the eye and reduces aberration. Light then traverses the crystalline lens and vitreous humour and finally is focussed on the retina. The highly curved cornea gives most refracting power to the eye, sometimes adjusted by spectacles or contact lenses. Muscles change the shape of the crystalline lens to adjust the focal length. This is called accommodation.

     

    Learning Objectives
    • Objective 1
    • Objective 2

     

     

    Table \(\PageIndex{1}\)
    Links to related material  

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    The Eye: performance and compromises
    Photon capture efficiency, aperture and aberration, focal length, integration time/ exposure time/ frames per second, stereoscopic vision, angle of view.

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    Why vision?
    Why is the octave from 400 to 700 nm so important? Why so little UR and IV vision? A comparison of vision and hearing.

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    3.1: Anatomy and function is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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