The outer part, Sklera
The clear gelatinous substance that fills the eyeball between the lens and the retina is called the vitreous humor. It helps maintain the shape of the eye and provides nourishment to the retina.
The clear jelly that gives the eyeball its shape is called the vitreous humor. It is a gel-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina of the eye, helping maintain the eye's spherical shape and providing support to the retina.
The gelatinous material that gives the eyeball its basic shape is called the vitreous humor. It is a clear, jelly-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina in the eye, providing structural support and maintaining the eye's round shape.
Vitreous humor helps maintain the shape of the eyeball and provides a cushioning effect to protect the delicate structures within the eye. It also helps with light transmission to the retina at the back of the eye.
The vitreous humor is a clear gel-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina in the eye. It helps maintain the shape of the eye and allows light to pass through to the retina. With age, the vitreous humor can shrink and become more liquid, leading to conditions like floaters or vitreous detachment.
maintains the shape of the eye ball.
vitreous humour. its a gel like substance that fills the eyeball.
The clear gelatinous substance that fills the eyeball between the lens and the retina is called the vitreous humor. It helps maintain the shape of the eye and provides nourishment to the retina.
The clear jelly that gives the eyeball its shape is called the vitreous humor. It is a gel-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina of the eye, helping maintain the eye's spherical shape and providing support to the retina.
Light rays pass through a dense, transparent gel-like substance, called the vitreous that fills the globe of the eyeball and helps the eye hold its spherical shape.
The watery fluid that fills much of the eyeball in front of the crystalline lens is called the aqueous humor. It helps to maintain the shape of the eye, provides nutrients to the surrounding tissues, and helps to maintain eye pressure.
The gelatinous material that gives the eyeball its basic shape is called the vitreous humor. It is a clear, jelly-like substance that fills the space between the lens and the retina in the eye, providing structural support and maintaining the eye's round shape.
intraocular fluid
when we are at farsight the eyeball is stretched.
The floaters are usually fragments of protein in the vitreous
Sphere
No, floaters are debris suspended in the semiliquid vitreous humor that fills the eyeball, helping maintain it spherical shape. Everyone has some floaters. Contacts have no effect on the development of floaters (nor do glasses) as they are outside the eyeball thus not in contact with the vitreous humor where the floaters are.