Science, asked by christ21, 8 months ago

Describe in detail how light helps us to see?​

Answers

Answered by kritusharma1919
1

Explanation:

OLOGY. Rays of light reflect, or bounce off, objects just like a ball bounces on the ground. This reflection of light is what enables us to see everything around us. Take a look out your window: you see everything in the natural world (that doesn't produce its own light) because it reflects the light of the Sun .

Answered by AnubhavGhosh1
1

Answer:

Light refers to a small segment of the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. Light reflects off things, enters the eye(s), and, thus, gives information about what is out there. Our eyes can often focus the light to form an image on the retina, further helping us make sense of what’s out there. While humans throw away information of polarization, they process information relating to intensity and to color. Humans form images. With both eyes, humans form three-dimensional images. Bees see polarization. Humans can also often tell that an objective is moving (before it jumps from here to there).

Explanation:

Rays of light reflect, or bounce off, objects just like a ball bounces on the ground. This reflection of light is what enables us to see everything around us. Take a look out your window: you see everything in the natural world (that doesn't produce its own light) because it reflects the light of the Sun. We can see the Moon because the Sun's light is reflected off the Moon's surface.

Light can reflect in different ways, changing the way objects look. Light reflects more off light-colored surfaces than dark-colored ones. You also see different types of reflection when you see an image reflected in a mirror or a spoon. A flat mirror reflects an exact, though reversed, image of an object because the reflected light rays travel at parallel paths. But a convex surface, like the outside of a spoon, causes light rays to spread out, distorting the reflected image.

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