Biology, asked by Harikrishnan2098, 1 year ago

The rods and cones in the eye transmit light and

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Answered by 1Angel24
0
Hey, mate here is your answer》》

The retina also contains the nerves that tell the brain what the photoreceptors are "seeing." ... Rods don't help with color vision, which is why at night, we see everything in a gray scale. The human eye has over 100 million rod cells. Cones require a lot more light and they are used to see color.

Hope this answer will help you..《《
Answered by amritanshu6
1
There are two types of photoreceptors in the human retina, rods and cones.

Rods are responsible for vision at low light levels (scotopic vision). They do not mediate color vision, and have a low spatial acuity.

Cones are active at higher light levels (photopic vision), are capable of color vision and are responsible for high spatial acuity. The central fovea is populated exclusively by cones. There are 3 types of cones which we will refer to as the short-wavelength sensitive cones, the middle-wavelength sensitive cones and the long-wavelength sensitive cones or S-cone, M-cones, and L-cones for short.

The light levels where both are operational are called mesopic.

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