infrared light and ultraviolet light
There are not different "forms" of light. There are, however, various wavelengths of light. A small portion of which we can see as "visible light," and most of which we cannot see directly with the human eye.
yes the human eye is sensitive to red light
Your eye
The eye
its the white thing that forms the eyeball
Visible light is visible (for the human eye), infrared is not. Infrared has a longer wavelength, and a higher frequency. visible light is visible to human i.e the VIBGYOR, above vibgyor are ultravoilet light which is not visible to human eye and below vibgyor are infrared light which is also not visible to human eye.
The retina is covered with specialized cells called rod cells (black and white) and cone cells (colors) they convert electrons that hit them into electrical impulses/nerve impulses that are interpreted by the brain. The locations of the millions of cells are transmitted in-time and curiously upside-down. The brain 'flips' the image to right side up.
The human eye uses light to see. Light bounces off of your surroundings and into your eye through your pupil, the black hole at the center. A picture forms on your retina, the lining at the back of your eye. Your brain makes sense out of what you see. Without light, there is nothing to enter your retina and start the whole process going.
If you mean, "which wavelengths of light can the human eye detect," the human eye can see wavelengths from about 390 to 700 nanometers.
will the human eye does not really see anything it just captures the light and the brain interprets it into recognizable images and corrects the position of the light ...
The main purpose of the human eye is to capture light. The eye captures the light from the surrounding and sends the data to the brain which interprets it.
Light.