Scarring behind the eyeball, often referred to as posterior segment scarring, can result from various conditions, including retinal detachment, inflammation (such as uveitis), trauma, or infection. These factors can lead to damage and subsequent scarring of the retina or other structures within the eye. Scarring can affect vision and may require medical evaluation and treatment, depending on the underlying cause.
intraocular fluid
No, because they are sticked to your pupil
The optic nerve located behind the eyeball
Yes.
In farsightedness (hyperopia), light is focused behind the retina due to the eyeball being too short or the cornea having too little curvature. This causes blurry vision when looking at close objects.
The rays of light focus beyond the retina.
The jelly-like material behind the lens of the eye is called the vitreous humor. It helps to maintain the shape of the eyeball, support the retina, and transmit light to the back of the eye for visual processing.
Probably, but you'd have to get hit fairly hard from behind... ew...
Myopia, or nearsightedness, occurs when the eyeball is too long. This causes light to focus in front of the retina instead of directly on it, resulting in distant objects appearing blurry.
An eyeball is a ball in your eye
Eyeball
That movie is scaring a lot of people.