Seeing Light

KEY IDEAS

  • Eyes detect light, color and differences in brightness
  • Light travels into, and through, the eye
  • The brain makes sense of what the eyes see

EXAMPLE QUESTIONS

  • What do your eyes do?
  • How do some animals’ eyes differ from human eyes?
  • How do you tell the difference between bright and dim light?

EYES DETECT LIGHT

  • Eyes can detect different brightness and colors.
  • Light travels to the eyes and enters them through the pupils.
  • The iris controls the size of each pupil to let in more or less light.
  • The lens of an eye focuses the light onto the retina at the back of the eye.
  • Images of what the eyes are focusing on form on the retina, which contains sensitive receptor cells that convert the light into signals.
  • The signals travel, via the optic nerves, to the brain which interprets these signals.

ANIMALS’ EYES

  • Animals’ eyes differ from human eyes.
  • Cats and dogs have much better night vision than humans and their eyes are more sensitive to movement.
  • This means that they are good hunters.
  • Other animals, like horses, have eyes pointing sideways rather than straight ahead.
  • This gives them very good peripheral vision.
  • This helps them to detect predators.
  • Hunting birds, such as eagles and owls, have excellent binocular vision which help them to spot their prey from a long way off.