![]() |
Success is not the result of spontaneous combustion; you must set yourself on fire. - Reggie Leach |
| TODO - Link Text American Indian Drum Credit Card with Cash Back | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Night Vision - Adaptation
Our eyes are able to adjust to an amazing range of light levels, from the brightness of the noon day sun to a candle flame a great distance away. When you first walk out into a dark night, you can't see very well, but half and hour later you can almost read a newspaper. This is called adaptation or night vision. Although the process of adapting to the dark of night can take up to half an hour to complete it can take only seconds to loose. Cock pits and the dashboards of cars are often illuminated with red lights because red colors do not ruin the adaptation the same way blue or green lights do. When doing the reverse, going from dark to bright light, it takes only about five minutes. The Rods of Your Eyes Responsible For Night Vision.Rods are more sensitive and used for night vision, but there are relatively few in the fovea. Instead, the fovea has a high concentration of cones for sharp color vision. However, this means that at night, we may have difficulty seeing a star even when we're looking right at it. For this reason, astronomers may advise you to look just to one side of a star instead of looking directly at it. Why Do Cats See So Well In the Dark?Cats have a tapetum (tu'peetum), or a reflective coating, behind the light sensitive cells in their eyes which help them to see in the dark. Essentially, at night, the light that passes through the retina is reflected back through the retina a second time, giving them better night vision. There is a down side to this, though. The reflected light scatters, thereby loosing some degree of image clarity.
Adaptation Reaches Across Nine Orders Of Magnitude.
*Photopic VisionVision of the eye at normal light levels. Vision is acute and color perception is accurate. **Mesopic VisionVision of the eye in low light levels. Visual acuity and color discrimination is inaccurate. ***Scotopic VisionVision of the eye in low light levels. It is monochromatic, that is, we do not see colors because cone cells, which process colors, do not function in low light levels.
In research done by Holger Knau and Lothar Spillmann, it was determined that when staring at a sphere which was brightly colored, after a while, our eyes will adapt and the perceived color will change. The color will begin to look desaturated, eventually looking gray. Then the brightness will also fade. This takes between 2 to 7 minutes. This adaptation occurs faster for red, and slower for blue and violet. [Knau, Holger and Spillmann, Lothar, SPIE Proc., 2657, p. 19.] Read more about night vision.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Play Kuzushi
Credit Card for Bad Credit
Best Allergy Medication
Free Cheetah Race
The Danger of Fluoride
Voice Analysis
Refinance Home Loan
Healing Color Therapy
Best Allergy Medicine
Comments and Suggestions Some Related Links Go To The Site Map Link To Us Send Site To A Friend Other LinksRepair Credit Color Chooser Give Anonymous Feedback Natural Toothbrushes Best Allergy Medicine Funny Blonde Jokes Oregano Extract Give Anonymous Feedback Color Blue Prime Numbers Miss Piggy's Wisdom Chase Bank Cards No Fluoride Toothpaste? Sirius Satellite Radio Montana Jokes Candle Making Supplies Sound and Health HTML Characters Give Anonymous Feedback Color Beige Pet Fish Care Contact Us Tell Us About A Broken Link |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PageColor.com |
Site Map |
Terms of Use |
Privacy & Security |
Contact Us |
Purchase Agreement |
Send Feedback |