Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one...

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Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4

Transcript of Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one...

Page 1: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Notes -The Eye

Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4

Page 2: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Lenses

• A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Page 3: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

How the Eye Forms an Image

• As light enters your eye, lenses in your eye focus light to produce an image on the back of your eye.

Page 4: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

How the Eye Forms an Image

• Special cells at the back of the eye convert the image into electrical signals that travel to your brain.

Page 5: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Iris

• The pupil is the dark opening into the interior of your eye.

• The pupil is surrounded by the iris - the colored part of your eye behind the cornea.

Page 6: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Iris

• The iris controls the amount of light entering the eye by contracting in dim light, making the pupil larger, and allowing more light to enter.

Page 7: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Iris

• The iris expands in bright light, making the pupil smaller, and reducing the amount of light that enters the eye.

Page 8: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Cornea

• Light enters your eye through the cornea, which is a clear area of the sclera (the outer layer of the eye).

Page 9: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Cornea

• The cornea is a convex lens that causes light rays to converge as they enter the eye and reach the lens.

Page 10: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Lens

• The lens of your eye is convex and flexible.

• Ciliary muscles are attached to the flexible lens to make it rounder or fatter depending on the distance of the object being looked at.

Page 11: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Lens

Page 12: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Retina

• The retina is a sheet of light-sensitive cells in the back of the eye.

• Rod cells respond to dim light.

• Cone cells enable you to see colors.

Page 13: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Retina

• The cornea, the lens, and the ciliary muscles produce a sharp image on the retina.

Page 14: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Seeing Color

• The response of cone cells to different wavelengths of light cause you to see objects as having color.

Page 15: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Seeing Color

• Three types of cone cells:– One responds to the wavelengths of red and

yellow light, causing you to see red.– One responds to yellow and green light, causing

you to see green.– One responds to blue and violet light, causing you

to see blue.

Page 16: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Pigment Colors

• A pigment is a material used to change the color of other materials or objects.

• The color of a pigment depends on the wavelengths of the light it reflects.

Page 17: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Pigment Colors

Page 18: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Pigment Colors

• The pictures in magazines are formed by many tiny dots of color.

• Usually, the primary colors of pigments, as well as black, are used.

Page 19: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Common Vision Problems

• Color deficiency: either lack red or green cones, or the cones do not function correctly

Page 20: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Common Vision Problems

• Nearsightedness: cannot see faraway objects clearly because the eyeball is too long for the lens to form a sharp image of distant objects. Corrected with concave lenses.

Page 21: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

Common Vision Problems

• Farsightedness: cannot see nearby objects clearly because the eyeball is too short for the lens to form a sharp image of nearby objects. Corrected with convex lenses.

Page 22: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

1. What controls the amount of light that enters your eye?

A ciliary muscles

B cornea

C sclera

D iris

11.4 The Eye and Vision

Page 23: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

2. What part of the eye enables you to see colors?

A pupil

B rod cells

C cone cells

D optic nerve

11.4 The Eye and Vision

Page 24: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

3. Which describes a nearsighted eye?

A it is missing some cone cells or the cones don’t function properly

B the eyeball is too short for the lens to form a clear image

C the rods at the back of the eye do not function properly

D the eyeball is too long for the lens to form a clear image

11.4 The Eye and Vision

Page 25: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

4. Which part of the eye contains light-sensitive rods and cones?

A sclera

B cornea

C optic nerve

D retina

Page 26: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

5. In which order does light pass through the parts of the eye?

A lens, retina, pupil

B lens, pupil, retina

C retina, lens, pupil

D pupil, lens, retina

SCI 6.b

Page 27: Notes - The Eye Chapter 11, Lessons 3 & 4. Lenses A lens is a transparent object with at least one curved side that causes light waves to bend.

6. In the eye, the _____ is the opening through which light enters.

A pupil

B lens

C iris

D cornea

SCI 6.d