When the image reaches the eye, it is right-side up. The optics in your eye flip the image upside down in the process of absorbing the light. The up-side down image is then sent to your brain. You brain translates it back to right side up, and then creates the image for you to see. The image never appears upside down to you, because your brain does not create the image for you to see until it has flipped it back right-side up.
The layer at the back of the eye where the image is projected upside down is called the retina. The retina contains photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) that detect light and convert it into neural signals. When light enters the eye, it passes through the lens, which inverts the image before it reaches the retina, resulting in an upside-down image that the brain later processes to perceive correctly.
If you could see the image projected onto the retina of the eye by the lens, it would be of the environment that the person in question is looking at, but upside down.
A concave lens, also known as a diverging lens, can produce an image that is upside down and reversed. This type of lens causes light rays to spread out, resulting in an image that is flipped both vertically and horizontally when compared to the original object.
The image formed on the retina is actually inverted due to the way light rays refract in the eye. The brain processes this inverted image and flips it back upright to create a coherent visual perception.
The inverted or upside-down image is formed on the retina.
When the image reaches the eye, it is right-side up. The optics in your eye flip the image upside down in the process of absorbing the light. The up-side down image is then sent to your brain. You brain translates it back to right side up, and then creates the image for you to see. The image never appears upside down to you, because your brain does not create the image for you to see until it has flipped it back right-side up.
it is upside down in the back of the eye and the brain corrects that.
it looks like a mirror image, and flipped upside down
The layer at the back of the eye where the image is projected upside down is called the retina. The retina contains photoreceptor cells (rods and cones) that detect light and convert it into neural signals. When light enters the eye, it passes through the lens, which inverts the image before it reaches the retina, resulting in an upside-down image that the brain later processes to perceive correctly.
If you could see the image projected onto the retina of the eye by the lens, it would be of the environment that the person in question is looking at, but upside down.
An inverted image with the eye refers to an image that is formed upside down on the retina of the eye. This happens because light rays coming from an object are refracted by the eye's lens and focused on the retina. The brain then processes this inverted image and interprets it as right side up.
a upside down image is formed in your camera then flipped around when it is seen by the human eye -Monica Magallon
a upside down image is formed in your camera then flipped around when it is seen by the human eye -Monica Magallon
Yes, the human eye sees things upside down initially, but the brain flips the image right side up so we perceive the world correctly.
I'm not sure, but I think the answer is upside down.
A concave lens, also known as a diverging lens, can produce an image that is upside down and reversed. This type of lens causes light rays to spread out, resulting in an image that is flipped both vertically and horizontally when compared to the original object.