Glass 10 Science
Chapter 11 Human eye and Colourful world
Introduction
→ Human eye: The sense organ that helps us to see.
→ Located in eye sockets in skull.
→ Diameter of eye ball – 2.3 cm.
Parts of Human Eye
• Cornea: It is the outermost, transparent part. It provides most of the refraction of light.
• Lens: It is composed of a fibrous, jelly like material. Provides the focused real and inverted image of the object on the retina. This is convex lens that converges light at retina.
• Iris: It is a dark muscular diaphragm that controls the size of the pupil.
• Pupil: It is the window of the eye. It is the central aperture in iris. It regulates and controls the amount of light entering the eye.
• Retina: It is a delicate membrane having enormous number of light sensitive cells.
• Far point: The maximum distance at which object can be seen clearly is far point of the eye. For a normal adult eye, its value is infinity.
Near point or Least distance of distinct vision
→ The minimum distance at which objects can be seen most distinctively without strain.
→ For a normal adult eye, its value is 25 cm.
→ Range of human vision – 25 cm to infinity.
• Accomodation: The ability of the eye lens to adjust its focal length is called accommodation. Focal length can be changed with the help of ciliary muscles.
→ Focal length increases when Ciliary muscles get relaxed and lens get thin.
→ Focal length decreases when Ciliary muscles get contract and lens get thick.
Myopia (Near sightedness)
→ A myopic person can see nearby objects clearly but cannot see distant objects clearly.
→ Image is formed in front of retina.
Causes of Myopia
→ Excessive curvature of eye lens.
→ Elongation of eye ball
Correction of Myopia
→ It is done by using concave lens of appropriate power.
(i) In a myopic eye, image of distant object is formed in front of the retina. (and not on the retina)
(ii) The far point (F) of a myopic eye is less than infinity.
(iii) Correction of myopia. The concave lens placed in front of the eye forms a virtual image of distant object at far point (F) of the myopic eye.
→ Use of convex lens of suitable power can correct the defect.
Presbyopia (Old age Hypermetropia)
→ It is the defect of vision due to which an old person cannot see the nearby objects clearly due to loss of power of accomodation of the eye.
→ The near-point of the old person having presbyopia gradually recedes and becomes much more than 25 cm away.
Causes of Presbyopia
→ Gradual weakening of ciliary muscles.
→ Diminishing flexibility of eye lens.
Correction of Presbyopia
→ Use of convex lens of suitable power.
→ Sometimes a person may suffer from both myopia and hypermetropia.
→ Such people require bifocal lens for correction.
Advantage of the eyes in front of the face
→ It gives a wider field of view.
→ It enhances the ability to detect faint objects.
→ It provides three dimensional view.
Refraction through a glass prism
• Prism: It is a pyramidal piece of glass with two triangular bases and three rectangular lateral surfaces.
• Angle of Prism: The angle between two adjoining lateral surfaces. Refraction through a glass prism.
Angle of deviation (d): It is the angle between incident ray and emergent ray.
→ When white light is passed through a glass prism, it splits into its seven constituent colours to form a band of seven colours. This phenomenon is called dispersion.
• Spectrum: The band of seven colours formed due to dispersion of white light is called spectrum.
• Acronym: It is a group of alphabets that represent sequential colours in spectrum.V I B G Y O R
→ Angle of deviation ∝ 1/wavelength
→ Red is the least deviated colour as it has largest/longest wavelength.
→ Violet is the most deviated colour as it has smallest wavelength in visible spectrum.
→ Issac Newton was the first person who proved that sunlight is made up of seven colours :
(i) He passed sunlight through a glass prism to form a band of seven colours.
(ii) He tried to split the colours further by putting another prism ahead of the prism forming spectrum but he failed to obtain more colours.
(iii) He formed a spectrum from sunlight and placed an identical but inverted prism in front of prism forming the spectrum. All the seven colours combined by the inverted prism and emerged as white light.
Total Internal Reflection
→ When light enters obliquely from a denser medium to a rarer medium and the angle of incidence exceeds critical angle, the light reflects in the denser medium. This is called internal reflection.
Conditions necessary for Internal Reflection
→ Light should enter obliquely from a denser to a rarer medium.
→ The angle of incidence should exceed critical angle, the light reflects in the denser medium.
• Critical angle: The angle of incidence for which the angle of refraction is 90º.
• Rainbow: It is a natural spectrum appearing in the sky after rain showers. Rainbow is observed in the direction opposite to the sun.
• Three phenomenon which are involved in rainbow formation are :→ The refractive index of earth’s atmosphere in general increases from top to bottom.
→ So, the light coming from a star near the horizon has to travel from rarer to denser medium and it bends towards the normal.
→ As a result the star appears higher.
(iii) Advanced sunrise
→ The sun appears about two minutes earlier than actual sunrise and the sun remains visible for about two minutes after actual sunset.
→ When the sun is below horizon, the rays have to pass from rarer to denser medium.
→ So rays bend towards the normal. As a result the sun appears higher than its actual position.
(iv) Twinkling of stars
→ Stars are very far from us, so they behave as point source of light.
→ Since the physical conditions of the earth’s atmosphere are not constant the light fromstars appears to come from different directions.
→ This results in fluctuation of apparent position of star.
→ The amount of light coming from stars also vary due to changing Refractive Index of atmosphere.
→ The star appears bright when more light from star reaches our eyes and the same star appears dull when less amount of light reaches our eyes.
→ Both these effects are responsible for twinkling of stars.
Scattering effect
Spreading of light in various directions by colloid particles.
Scattering ∝ 1/wavelength
• Tyndall effect: When light passes through a colloid its path becomes visible. This is called Tyndall effect.
Example:
(i) Path of light becomes visible when light enters a dark and dusty room through a slit or ventilator.
(ii) Path of light becomes visible when light passes through dense canopy of trees in a forest.
Dependence of colour of scattered light
Due to this most of the blue light (shorter wavelength) are scattered away by the particles. The light of longer wavelength (red colour) will reach our eye. This is why sun appear red in colour.
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