The eye lids.
The part of the eye that is similar to the shutter in a camera is the iris. It regulates the amount of light entering the eye by adjusting the size of the pupil, functioning like a camera's aperture to control the amount of light reaching the retina.
Eye Lids Shawty iz definently tha eye lids
The shutter speed of the human eye is much faster than that of a camera. The eye can perceive and process images in a fraction of a second, while a camera's shutter speed is measured in milliseconds.
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 emulsion on the film of a camera is where the image is focused and captured. In the eye that function is performed by the retina.
The shutter acts like the iris of the eye because it lets the proper amount of light.
A camera's shutter is similar to the human eyelid, so in a sense eyes do have 'shutters' Obviously :D
The letter is I. Eyes are part of the head.
eye lashes
The eye.
The shutter is a piece of the camera that opens up when you take a photo. The shutter speed is how long this shutter stays open, the longer the time , the more light getting through - and the more motion blur. The aperture is the part of the camera that controls how much light is getting through, the smaller the f stop the more light getting through, and vice versa. The aperture is like the black part of are eye, I do not know if you have ever noticed, but, when you go in to a dark place the black dot gets bigger, when you go to a place with a lot of light the black dot gets smaller, same for the camera. Also, you did not mention ISO, that is not a part of the camera but just a setting. The higher the ISO the more sensitive the shutter is to light, but you also get more noise with high ISO.
shutter speed