No, the cornea and the iris are not the same thing. The cornea is the transparent, outermost layer of the eye that helps focus light, while the iris is the colored part of the eye that controls the size of the pupil and regulates the amount of light entering the eye. Both structures play crucial roles in vision but have distinct functions and anatomical features.
Between the Cornea and the Iris is the Aqeous Humor.
Between the Cornea and the Iris is the Aqeous Humor.
welll it is the lower cornea
The cornea covers the iris.
The cornea.
Iris, lense, retina, cornea
iris
The cornea is the transparent, clear front surface of the eye, while the colored part of the eye is the iris. The cornea helps to focus light entering the eye onto the retina, which is essential for clear vision.
A type of glaucoma in which cells from the back of the cornea spread over the surface of the iris and tissue that drains the eye, forming adhesions that bind the iris to the cornea
That is the cornea of the eye.
"Eye dome, my home."
The cornea is the surface of the eye. It is completely transparent, as all light that enters the eye must pass through the cornea. If you look at a person's eye from the side, you will see some clear material covering the front of the eyeball. That is the cornea. The iris is what controls the amount of light let into the eye. It is what gives the eye its colour, and it is what actually controls the size of the pupil.