Image Formation and Detection
We knew that the eye consists of a cornea (thin outer membrane),
a lens attached to ciliary muscles, and a retina (inner surface equipped with
nerve cells). These four parts of the eye are the most instrumental in the task
of producing images that are discernible by the brain. In order to facilitate
the ability to see, each part must enable the eye to refract light so that is
produces a focused image on the retina
It
is a surprise to most people to find out that the lens of the eye is not where
all the refraction of incoming light rays takes place. Most of the refraction
occurs at the cornea. The cornea is the outer membrane of the eyeball that has
an index of refraction of 1.38. The index of refraction of the cornea is
significantly greater than the index of refraction of the surrounding air. This
difference in optical density between the air the corneal material combined
with the fact that the cornea has the shape of a converging lens is what explains the ability of the cornea to do
most of the refracting of incoming light rays. The crystalline lens is able to
alter its shape due to the action of the ciliary muscles. This serves to induce
small alterations in the amount of corneal bulge as well as to fine-tune some
of the additional refraction that occurs as light
passes through the lens
material.
double convex
lens. The focal length of the cornea-lens system varies with the
amount contraction (or relaxation) of the ciliary muscles and the resulting
shape of the lens. In general, the focal length is approximately 1.8 cm, give
or take a millimeter. As known of convex lenses , the image location, size, orientation, and type is
dependent upon the location of the object relative to the focal point and the
2F point of a lens system. Since the object is typically located at a point in
space more than 2-focal lengths from the "lens," the image will be
located somewhere between the focal point of the "lens" and the 2F
point. The image will be inverted, reduced in size, and real. Quite
conveniently, the cornea-lens system produces an image of an object on the
retinal surface. The process by which this occurs is known as accommodation
and will be discussed in more detail later on. Fortunately, the image is a real image - formed by the
actual convergence of light rays at a point in space. Vision is dependent upon
the stimulation of nerve impulses by an incoming light rays. Only real images
would be capable of producing such a stimulation. Finally, the reduction in the
size of the image allows the entire image to "fit" on the retina. The
fact that the image is inverted poses no problem. Our brain has become quite
accustomed to this and properly interprets the signal as originating from a
right-side-up object.
The use of the lens equation
and magnification equation can provide an idea of the quantitative
relationship between the object distance, image distance and focal length. For
now we will assume that the cornea-lens system has a focal length of 1.80 cm
(0.0180 m). We will attempt to determine the image size and image location of a
6-foot tall man (ho=1.83 m) who is standing a distance of approximately 10 feet
away (do= 3.05 meters). (The lens equation is derived geometrically upon the
assumption that the lens is a thin lens. The lens of the eye is anything but
thin and as such the lens equation does not provide a truly accurate model of
the eye lens. Despite this fact, we will use the equation as a simplified
approximation of the mathematics of the eye.)
do = 3.05 m
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ho = 1.83 m
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f = 0.0180 m
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Next identify the unknown quantities that you wish to solve for.
di = ???
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hi = ???
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To determine the image distance, the lens equation can be used.
The following lines represent the solution to the image distance; substitutions
and algebraic steps are shown.
1/f = 1/do + 1/di
1/(0.0180 m) = 1/(3.05 m) + 1/di
55.6 m-1 = 0.328 m-1 + 1/di
55.2 m-1 = 1/di
di = 0.0181 m = 1.81 cm
|
To determine the image height, the magnification equation is
needed. Since three of the four quantities in the equation (disregarding the M)
are known, the fourth quantity can be calculated. The solution is shown below.
hi/ho = - di/do
hi /(1.83 m) = - ( 0.0181 m)/(3.05 m)
hi = - (1.83 m) • (0.0181m)/(3.05 m)
hi = -0.0109 m = -1.09 cm
|
From the calculations in this problem it can be concluded that
if a 1.83-m tall person is standing 3.05 m from your cornea-lens system having
a focal length of 1.8 cm, then the image will be inverted, 1.09-cm tall (the
negative values for image height indicate that the image is an inverted image)
and located 1.81 cm from the "lens".
Dependence of himage and dimage on dobject
(focal length is fixed at 1.8 cm)
|
The results of these calculations (as illustrated in the
table above) illustrate two important principles concerning the ability of the
eye to discern objects that are both close up and far away. First, the distance
between the observer and the object will greatly influence the image size
(height and width of the image formed on the retina) and quality. Objects that
are viewed at close proximity produce images that are larger than distant
objects. Such an image is typically spread over the entirety of the retina and
even at times would extend beyond the extremities of the retina. Thus, the full
dimensions of a 6-foot tall person cannot be seen if he/she stands 1-meter away
(unless the eyeballs are rolled in their socket). On the other hand, the entire
image of the same person can easily be seen when standing 100-meters away.
In
this instance, the image takes up a small amount of space on the back of the
retina. The drawback however is that the finer details of the image are lost
due to the reduction in the size of the image. Since the image is stimulating a
smaller region of nerve cells, some details are lost since they fail to provide
sufficient stimulation to allow the brain to discern them. For such an object
distance, the small image that is created of a man might make it impossible to
discern that the man's fly is open or that his socks and belt don't match.
Second, the varying distance between the observer and the
object poses some potential problems for the human eye. Objects located varying
distances from a lens system with a fixed focal length produce images that are
varying distances from the lens. Yet, the eye must always produce an image on
the retina - a location that is always the same distance away from the cornea.
The eye cannot afford to allow changes in the image distance. So how does an
eye always focus images with the same dimage regardless of the fact that the dobject
is different? How can an object 100 meters away be focused the same distance
from the cornea-lens system as an object that is 1 meter away?
The answer: the
cornea-lens system is able to change its focal length. The ciliary muscles of
the eye serve to contract and relax, thus changing the shape of the lens. This
serves to allow the eye to change its focal length and thus appropriately focus
images of objects that are both close up and far away. This process is known as
accommodation and is the focus.
Hola! Tu blog me ha ayudado muchísimo a estudiar para un trabajo escolar y para comparar algunos conceptos entre trabajos. Te doy las gracias por esto. Sería bueno si pusieras tu nombre como autor de las notas para citarte cuando hago trabajos y otorgarte el crédito que mereces. Buenas vibras.
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