Light And The Eye (3) Flashcards

1
Q

How is electromagnetic energy usually described?

A

In terms of wavelength - the distance between the peaks of the electromagnetic waves

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2
Q

What is wavelength distance measured in for visible light (as opposed to normal metres)

A

Nanometres

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3
Q

What does the visible spectrum for humans range from?

A

400-700nm (because X-rays and UV are harmful for our DNA - too low nm)

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4
Q

Cornea

A

The transparent tissue at the very front of the eye

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5
Q

Sclera

A

Tough white tissue that coats the rest of the eye (white part of eye)

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6
Q

Iris

A

Muscle tissue that controls the size of the pupil and therefore the amount of light that enters the eye

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7
Q

Accomodation*

A

When the ciliary muscles are tightened which causes the lens to thicken and focus on the objects that are closer to you

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8
Q

Common optical problem: MYOPIA**

A

Inability to see distant objects clearly
Image is focused on retina when lens is ‘RELAXED’

Refractive myopia - cornea or lens bends too much light
Axial myopia - eyeball is too long

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9
Q

Common optical (problem?) PRESBYOPIA*

A

The near point is the distance where the lens can no longer adjust to close objects
(Distance of this increases with age)

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10
Q

Common optical problem: hyperopia or far sightendness*

A

Inability to see nearby objects clearly

Focus point is behind the retina
(Usually caused by an eyeball that is too short)

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11
Q

Which part of photoreceptors contain the light-sensitive visual pigment**

A

The outer segments

Light is transduced into electricity here

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12
Q

Which 2 components do the visual pigment molecules in photoreceptors consist of **

A

OPSIN - a large protein
RETINAL - a light sensitive molecule

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13
Q

Isomerisation

A

(Visual transuction occurs) retinal (light-sensitive molecule) changes its shape and absorbs light

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14
Q

Why don’t we see the blind spot

A

One eye covers the blind spot of the other (the brain ‘fills in’ the spot)

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15
Q

Which are more sensitive to light - rods/cones?

A

Rods (rods take less light to respond)

But rod pathways to the brain cannot resolve detail as well as cone pathways

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