how do normal vision of eye is affected by myopia and hypermetropia
Answers
Explanation:
With normal vision, an image is sharply focused onto the surface of the retina. In farsightedness (hyperopia), your cornea doesn't refract light properly, so the point of focus falls behind the retina. This makes close-up objects appear blurry.
Answer:
Hypermetropia, sometimes called hyperopia, is the term used to define being longsighted.
If you are hypermetropic, the image of a nearby object is formed behind the retina. This means that light is focused too far back in the eye, causing things which are close up to appear blurred.
What is Myopia?
Myopia is the term used to define being shortsighted.
A myopic person has clear vision when looking at objects close to them, but distant objects will appear blurred. This is because light is focused in front of the retina and, being too far forward in the eye, things in the distance look blurred.
Explanation:
I hope this is helpful.