Science, asked by ankita62, 1 year ago

why our eyes may be damaged by seeing the solar eclipse

Answers

Answered by sharmashruti01ss1
2
seeing a solar eclipse happen may flood the retina , which is the home to light sensing cells , with bright light from the sun , resulting in total or partial blindness. The interesting thing here is that the whole process is generally painless and the observer has no idea what's happening to his eyes
Answered by harismitha
3
You cannot safely watch the  solar eclipse without wearing protective glasses.

If you aren't wearing protective glasses, ultraviolet light from the sun can penetrate and be absorbed into your retina, causing a condition that eye doctors call solar retinopathy

Many people are aware of that, but there are still some myths out there about what happens to people who have looked at an eclipse without protection.

Contrary to what some warnings make it sound like, solar retinopathy doesn't necessarily leave people blind. For most people, the damage affects central vision and may make it blurry or spotty. In some cases, that damage goes away after a few days, weeks, or months. But in others, that damage is permanent.

And it's all because of the power of the sun and the way an eclipse can cloud our judgment.


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