the eyes
stimulus sense organs light eyes heat skin touch skin chemicals tongue sound ears pain skin and internal organs chemicals in the air nose
Light is a passing source of physical energy that can produce a response in the sense organ of the eye, leading to visual perception.
The skin is both a sense and excretory organ.
The largest sense organ in the human body is the skin. The skin is responsible for detecting touch, pressure, temperature, and pain. It also helps regulate body temperature and protect the body from external threats.
Your eyes detect it, (retina) it is then sent down your optical nerve to the brain
-- The organ of the sense of sight is the eye, including the optic nerve. -- The organ of the sense of hearing is the ear, including the middle and inner ones. -- The organ of the sense of smell is the nose and the olfactory nerves. -- The organ of the sense of taste is the tongue and its taste buds. -- The organ of the sense of touch is the skin and its nerve endings.
The sense organ that has rods and cones that help you see light and color is the retina.
The nasal canal is made up of olfactory cells that allow you to detect odors.
A sense organ is an organ of the 6 senses. The sense organs and senses are: the eyes--sight the nose--smell the tongue--taste the ears--hearing and balance the skin--touch
Examples of sense organs include the eyes, which detect light and enable vision; the ears, which perceive sound and facilitate hearing; the nose, responsible for the sense of smell; the tongue, which detects taste; and the skin, which senses touch, temperature, and pain. Each of these organs contains specialized cells that respond to specific stimuli, allowing us to interact with and interpret our environment.
hearing
There is no sense organ beginning with the letter U.