No part of the eye "attracts" light.
Light enters the eye by passing through the cornea and the aqueous humour before getting to the lens. After being focused by the lens, light passes through the vitreous humour to the retina.
LIGHT HITS THE OBJECT AND SENDS OUT LIGHT WAVES WITCH REFLECT OFF THE OBJECT AND ON TO YOUR EYES
LENS
The lens of the eye also called the crystalline lens.
The cornea is the clear part of the outer tunic of the eye through which light passes.
When light enters the eye, it first passes through the cornea, which is the clear outer covering of the eye. It then travels through the pupil, which is the opening in the center of the iris. Next, it reaches the lens, which focuses the light onto the retina at the back of the eye, where it is converted into electrical signals that can be interpreted by the brain.
The crystalline lens is the part of the eye that bends/refracts the light rays as it passes through it.
how does light effect your eye? In a compound light microscope? The light passes through three lenses between the light source and your eye. The first lens is the condenser lens.. The second lens is the objective lens. The third and final lens is the Eyepiece, also known as, the ocular lens. This is the lens you look through. These are the lenses that light must pass through to get from the light source to your eye.
lens
LENS
The lens of the eye also called the crystalline lens.
The retina at the back of the eye is light-sensitive
The cornea is the clear part of the outer tunic of the eye through which light passes.
Lens
The lens focuses light by bending the light to make it strike the retina in the right angle
The lens focuses light by bending the light to make it strike the retina in the right angle
When light enters the eye, it first passes through the cornea, which is the clear outer covering of the eye. It then travels through the pupil, which is the opening in the center of the iris. Next, it reaches the lens, which focuses the light onto the retina at the back of the eye, where it is converted into electrical signals that can be interpreted by the brain.
The iris. - - - - - No. It's the eyelid. The shutter's function is to completely stop light from reaching the film (or the sensor, if you have a digital camera with a mechanical shutter). The iris in your eye cannot do this--only the eyelid can.
The light first passes through the Cornea, a transparent layer which begins to focus the light onto the rear of the eye.