The human eye functions like a camera, using a convex lens to focus light on the retina. Light first passes through the cornea, where most refraction occurs, and then through the eye lens, which fine-tunes the focus. The iris controls the amount of light entering through the pupil. The retina contains light-sensitive cells that convert light into electrical signals sent to the brain. The eye’s ability to adjust its lens shape for viewing near and far objects is called accommodation. The least distance for comfortable near vision is about 25 cm, while the far point is infinity. Cataracts can cloud the lens, leading to vision loss, but surgery can restore sight.
The three main refractive defects are:
Light refracting through a prism bends and splits into a spectrum (VIBGYOR) due to dispersion, with red bending least and violet most. This explains phenomena like rainbows, formed by refraction, dispersion, and internal reflection in raindrops. Atmospheric refraction causes twinkling of stars and the apparent early sunrise and delayed sunset. Scattering of light, especially by tiny atmospheric particles, makes the sky appear blue and the Sun red at sunrise and sunset. Blue light is scattered more than red due to its shorter wavelength.