We see objects, because:* Light from the objects reaches us. * Our eyes (and brains) are especially equipped to detect such light.
Nearsighted people can see objects that are close more clearly than objects that are far away.
These objects are opaque.
A Force.
what processes produce the different colors we see in opaque objects
I would be visiting a museum.
In order to see, the eye must receive light; and darkness is the absence of light. Most of the objects we see around us are visible by reflected light -- reflected sunlight or reflected artificial light. Since darkness is the absence of light, there is no light in the darkness to be reflected from chairs, tables, or people to our eyes, and therefore we can not see these objects.
Being in reverse is simply for car drivers to see it correctly in their mirror for the mirror reverses objects.
They are sets of objects.
its important to biologists because they have to discover different objects and look close at it in order to see
you see with your pupil.
you see coloured objects by the light. light makes the color of the object
We see objects, because:* Light from the objects reaches us. * Our eyes (and brains) are especially equipped to detect such light.
We can see non-luminous objects because the light reflect off the object and into our eyes that's why at night you can only see a faint out line of the objects around you
People see objects - because light is reflected back to the person viewing.
False.
Nearsighted people can see objects that are close more clearly than objects that are far away.