The human eye is very specialised and gives us clear, defined, well focused colour vision. Although very complex, the human eye is much worse for certain aspects of sight than many animal eyes. The eagle for e.g. has much better focus, and can see objects (such as prey - rabbits) from great distances relatively well due to binocular vision.
Some people trip over rabbits. Enough said really.
Only half of the Human eye is showing.
The smallest size of a cell that can be seen with the unaided human eye is about 100 microns, which is roughly the size of a grain of sand. Anything smaller than that would generally require a microscope to be visible.
back of the eye behind the viscous humor
The human eye does not have megapixels because it does not function in the same way as a digital camera. The eye's resolution is determined by the density of photoreceptors in the retina, not by pixels.
mammalian eye
yes the human eye
Exactness. A computer is going to be more accurate than a human trying to match by eye.
There are more rods than cones in the human eye.
There are more rods than cones in the human eye.
will the human eye does not really see anything it just captures the light and the brain interprets it into recognizable images and corrects the position of the light ...
I believe anything dust-sized, microscopic, and smaller.
How does linear perspective deceive the human eye?Read more: How_does_linear_perspective_deceive_the_human_eye
Yes, rods are more sensitive to light than cones in the human eye.
It doesn't look anything. The human eye can't see it at all. You can't even tell if ultraviolet light is there or not.
No, 300 nanometers is not visible to the human eye. The visible spectrum for humans is approximately 400 to 700 nanometers. Anything below or above this range is not visible to the naked eye.
You can see anything small with it that you can't see with the human eye
to help blind people and for understanding human eye more closely