Biology, asked by Anonymous, 8 months ago

What is the difference between Miopea and hypermetropia.. ​

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Answered by Anonymous
4

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The difference between myopia and hypermetropia is that a myopic person is only able to see the near or short distance objects clearly whereas a hypermetropic person is only able to see the far or distant objects clearly.

Both myopia and hypermetropia are the type of eye diseases that are based on the distance to see the object. These two are the “Refractive or Vision error”, where the image is formed at different sites (either in front or behind the retina) due to change in the size of an eyeball.

In a myopic eye, the image forms in front of the retina and in a hypermetropic eye, the image forms behind the retina but not ‘on the retina’ as the normal eye.

thanks

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Answered by MysteriousAryan
0

Explanation:

the \: main \: difference \: are =  \\ 1)the \: myopic \: person \: only \: able \: to \: see \:  \\ nearby \: place \:  \\ 2)the \: hypermetrophic \: person \: is \: able \:  \\ to \: see \: far \: object

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