the retina! where else, it burns it and riuns your eye
A light wave with a wavelength roughly between 350 and 800 nanometers will be seen, i.e. perceived by your visual aparatus ... if it enters your eye. (This is probably the main reason that such waves are often called "visible light".) If somebody on one side of the room shines a laser pointer at another guy on the other side of the room, and you're standing in the front of the room by the blackboard watching them, then no, you won't see the laser light crossing the room, because none of the energy enters your eye. But if there's a bit of dust in the air, and a bit of the laser light gets scattered in your direction and enters your eye, then you will see it.
Lens
When light enters the eye, it first passes through the cornea, which is the transparent outer layer of the eye. The cornea helps to focus the light as it enters, before it passes through the aqueous humor and then the pupil, which is controlled by the iris to regulate the amount of light that continues into the eye.
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lens
Light first enters the eye through the cornea, the clear outer covering of the eye that helps to focus light. The cornea then bends the light and directs it through the pupil, the black hole in the center of the colored iris.
The crystalline lens is the part of the eye that bends/refracts the light rays as it passes through it.
The cornea is responsible for focusing the light that enters the eye. It is the transparent portion of the eye that covers the front of the eye
Light enters the eye through the cornea, a transparent outer covering that helps focus the incoming light. The light then passes through the pupil, the small opening in the center of the iris, which adjusts its size to control the amount of light entering the eye.
Light enters the eye through the cornea, the transparent layer covering the front of the eye. Then it passes through the pupil, the opening in the center of the iris that regulates the amount of light entering the eye. The lens of the eye helps to focus the light onto the retina at the back of the eye, where the light is converted into electrical signals that are sent to the brain via the optic nerve for processing.
As light enters the eye, it passes through the cornea, the aqueous humor, the lens, and finally reaches the retina. These structures help to focus and transmit the incoming light to the photoreceptor cells in the retina where the visual signals are initiated.
When light enters your eye, it is focused by the cornea and the lens onto the retina at the back of the eye. The lens adjusts its shape to help focus the light onto the retina, where it is converted into neural signals that are sent to the brain for processing.