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Light and Vision How do we see?

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Light and Vision How do we see? What about other animals? Bird Vision How do nocturnal birds see? Rod cells are very sensitive in low light Humans have around 200,000 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Light and Vision How do we see?


1
Light and VisionHow do we see?
2
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
3
Things to Think About Today
  • Light waves travel in straight lines until they
    meet matter
  • Then, light is reflected, absorbed, refracted
  • Why do animals have eyes? How did eyes evolve?
  • What are the parts of the eye and how do they
    work to bend light

4
Light Energy Meets Matter
Refracted (Bent)
Reflected
Absorbed
5
  • Light waves travel in straight lines until they
    meet matter
  • Some matter ( lenses) focus rays and bend them in
    defined ways
  • Pin activityBoxes with solutions/laser pointer,
    ray box
  • Ray boxes with lenses, gelatin lenses

6
Convex Lenses
Magnifying Lenses are Convex lenses
7
Concave Lenses(divergent lenses)
8
Eyes Detect and Focus Light
  • Eyes are organs that detect light, and convert it
    to electro-chemical impulses in neurons
  • In higher organisms the eye is a complex optical
    system which
  • collects light from the surrounding environment
  • regulates its intensity through a diaphragm
  • focuses it through an adjustable assembly of
    lenses to form an image
  • converts the image into a set of electrical
    signals
  • transmits these signals to the brain, through
    complex neural pathways that connect the eye, via
    the optic nerve, to the visual cortex and other
    areas of the brain.

9
3 types of eyes have evolved
  • Single centered lens
  • Advanced mollusks (octopus), spiders,vertebrates
  • Many tiny lenses
  • Arthropods (trilobites)
  • Ex. Ants (50 images) Horsefly (7,000 images)
    Dragonfly (30,000 images)
  • Hole without lens
  • snakes

10
Parts of the Eye that you can See!
11
Functions of Parts of the Eye
  • Eyelid- protection of eye from injury
  • Pupil- hole in the center of the iris that lets
    light in
  • Appears black because the eye tissue absorbs most
    of the light
  • Sclera-tough outer layer
  • collagen and elastin
  • Iris-colored area surrounding pupil
  • Composed of smooth muscle

12
Interior Parts of the Eye
13
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14
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15
Path of an Image
  • Goes through the Cornea and Lens
  • Hits the back of the retina
  • Activates rod and cone cells
  • Transmit impulse through optic nerve to the brain

16
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17
Rod and Cone Cells
  • Rod Cells- numerous ( 130 million in each eye
  • Responsible for Twilight vision, Gray shades
  • Very sensitive to light
  • Found on outside of
  • retina
  • Cone Cells-
  • less numerous
  • ( 7 million)
  • Responsible for
  • Ability to see Color
  • Found in center of the retina
  • (macula)

18
Now, lets think about what might go wrong
19
Myopia- Near-sighted
  • Genetic Basis
  • Eye is longer than normal, Cornea steeper
  • Correct with glasses, contacts, surgery
  • Very common!
  • Can make it better by squinting!- Changes the
    eyeball shape!

20
Myopia Near Sightedness
21
Hyperopia- Far-sighted
  • Image is focused behind the eyeball
  • Cornea is flatter, eye is shorter, focusing power
    is weaker
  • Young people can accommodate by changing shape
    of eye As people get older, lens get harder and
    cant be bent.
  • Lasix surgery changes shape of cornea
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH000485
    3/

22
Hyperopia Farsightedness
23
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24
Cataracts
  • Clouding of the lens
  • Caused by aging or damage to the proteins that
    make up the lens
  • Chemicals, Diabetes, Injury, Smoking are
    causative
  • Surgery to remove lens

25
Normal/Cataract
26
Retinitis Pigmentosa
  • Rare genetic disease (1/4000 people in US)
  • Rods die and leave dark deposits in retina
  • Lose peripheral
  • and night vision

27
Normal/Retinitis
28
What about compound vision?
29
A Grid- Seen by a Human and an Insect
30
A spider web- seen by a human and an insect
31
Bee as seen by a mammal and an insect
32
Insect images
33
Insects See Colors Differently
http//www.naturfotograf.com/UV_flowers_list.html
34
What about other animals?
35
Bird Vision
  • How do nocturnal birds see?
  • Rod cells are very sensitive in low light
  • Humans have around 200,000/mm2, some owls have
    over a million/mm2
  • Birds also have larger pupils which let more
    light in
  • What about day foragers
  • Have more cones than humans
  • May have more than one fovea area of sharpness)

36
Ruminant Pupils
  • Slit-like in bright light, circular in dim light
  • Gives permanent wide-angle vision whether in dim
    or bright light -makes watching for predators
    more efficient.

37
Making the connection between physical science
and biology
  • Light travels in straight lines
  • Light bends when it meets matter
  • Lenses are matter that bend light
  • How animals see
  • Eye diseases
  • Do you need light to see?
  • Ray box
  • Bending Experiment
  • Play with Lenses
  • Eye Dissection
  • Annenberg video

38
Video
39
Wrap up Questions
  • What is seeing?
  •  
  • Can a human being see in the dark? Why?
  • How would a scientist test if you could see in
    the dark?

40
Reading Resources
  • A Natural History of the Senses-Diane Ackerman
  • Video- Annenberg Foundation
  • GEMS- http//lawrencehallofscience.org/gems/gemsgu
    idestopic.html

41
Exploring Light and Lenses
  • Concave Lenses and light
  • Pinhole Viewer (Camera)
  • Camera Obscura

Camera Box
Camera Obscura (CA)
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