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The radial and circular muscles of the 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.
As in a camera, this part is usually called an iris diaphragm. It can make the aperture bigger to let in more light, or smaller to make the image sharper. The shutter in a camera is not the same thing.
The iris is the part of the eye that is a 4-letter word and starts with the letter "i." The iris is the colored part of the eye that surrounds the pupil and controls the amount of light entering the eye.
The eye shape you are referring to is called almond-shaped eyes.
The eye lids.
The part of the eye that functions similarly to a shutter release is the iris. The iris controls the size of the pupil, which regulates the amount of light that enters the eye, much like a camera's shutter controls light exposure. When light levels change, the iris adjusts the pupil's size to ensure optimal vision, similar to how a camera shutter opens and closes to capture an image.
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.
A camera's shutter is similar to the human eyelid, so in a sense eyes do have 'shutters' Obviously :D
Eye Lids Shawty iz definently tha eye lids
The part of the eye that is similar to a contact lens is the crystalline lens.
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.
iris
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.
shutter speed
That should be the shutter.
The shutter release is usually known as a mechanical cable (similar to a brake cable you would find on a bicycle) that is connected to a shutter and then used to actuate (open and close) a mechanical shutter. In a more contemporary application, shutter releases can be hand held push button switches or foot switches that can be used to control the electronic pulse that would be used to actuate an electro-mechanical shutter.