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10
                               CHAPTER

                               The Human Eye and



                               the Colourful World







                    ou have studied in the previous chapter about refraction of light by
                 Ylenses. You also studied the nature, position and relative size of
                 images formed by lenses. How can these ideas help us in the study of
                 the human eye? The human eye uses light and enables us to see objects
                 around us. It has a lens in its structure.  What is the function of the lens
                 in a human eye? How do the lenses used in spectacles correct defects of
                 vision? Let us consider these questions in this chapter.
                    We have learnt in the previous chapter about light and some of its
                 properties. In this chapter, we shall use these ideas to study some of the
                 optical phenomena in nature. We shall also discuss about rainbow
                 formation, splitting of white light and blue colour of the sky.

                 10.1 THE HUMAN EYE

                 The human eye is one of the most valuable and sensitive sense organs.
                 It enables us to see the wonderful world and the colours around us. On
                 closing the eyes, we can identify objects to some extent by their smell,
                 taste, sound they make or by touch. It is, however, impossible to identify
                 colours while closing the eyes. Thus, of all the sense organs, the human
                 eye is the most significant one as it enables us to see the beautiful,
                 colourful world around us.
                    The human eye is like a camera.  Its lens
                 system forms an image on a light-sensitive
                 screen called the retina. Light enters the eye
                 through a thin membrane called the cornea.
                 It forms the transparent bulge on the front
                 surface of the eyeball as shown in Fig. 10.1.
                 The eyeball is approximately spherical in shape
                 with a diameter of about 2.3 cm. Most of the
                 refraction for the light rays entering the eye
                 occurs at the outer surface of the cornea. The
                 crystalline lens merely provides the finer
                 adjustment of focal length required to focus
                                                                                         Figure
                                                                                         Figure 10.110.1
                                                                                         Figure
                                                                                         Figure 10.1
                                                                                                 10.1
                 objects at different distances on the retina. We find a structure called iris  Figure 10.1
                                                                                         The human eye
                 behind the cornea. Iris is a dark muscular diaphragm that controls the
                 size of the pupil.  The pupil regulates and controls the amount of light


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