Optical properties of the eye Lecture Two Flashcards

1
Q

What refracts light rays onto the retina?

A

The cornea and the lens

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2
Q

Describe the basic structure of the eye from anterior to posterior:

A

Tear Layer - Cornea - Aqueous Humor - Lens + Cillary body set up - Vitreous Humor - Retina

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3
Q

Describe the lens set up - with regards to accomodation:

A

The Lens is surrounded by a lens capsule which the Zonular fibres attach to. The Zonular fibres attach to the ciliary body/ muscle.

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4
Q

What types of muscle are in the ciliary body?

A

Longitudinal
Circular
Radial fibres.

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5
Q

Define the Aqueous Humor:

A

Clear watery fluid - anterior compartment : Maintains pressure and nourishes the cornea and lens.

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6
Q

Define the Vitreous humour:

A

Clear jelly like fluid - Posterior compartment : Maintains the shape of the eye and attaches to the retina.

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7
Q

What are the ciliary muscles?

A

Involuntary muscles that change the lens shape and thus optic power (accomodation) to allow focusing of objects at different locations.

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8
Q

Whats the cornea?

A

The cornea is a transparent tissue. It is avascular and anueral. It has a 40 diopter value and therefore refracts light onto the retina

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9
Q

What is the iris?

A

Circular band of muscle that controls the size of the pupil and therefore changes the degree of light entering the eye.

Blue eyes have the least pigment and brown the most.

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10
Q

What is the lens?

A

The lens is transparent tissue that refracts light, focusing it onto the retina of the eye. The lens can change shape (accomodation)

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11
Q

What is the optic nerve?

A

A bundle of over one million axons from ganglion cells that carry visual signals from the eye to the brain.

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12
Q

What is the pupil?

A

Hole in the centre of the eye where light passes through.

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13
Q

What is the choroid?

A

Thin layer of tissue containing blood vessels that sits between the retina and the sclera of the eye.

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14
Q

What is the retina?

A

Layer of tissue at the back of the eye containing photoreceptors

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15
Q

What is the sclera?

A

Tough white outer covering of the eyeball. Extra ocular muscles attach here to move the eye.

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16
Q

Despite being a optic tool, it must also be remembered that the eye is what?

A

A biological tissue and acts so accordingly.

17
Q

What is optical power?

A

The degree to which light either converges of diverges.

18
Q

What is a dioptre?

A

A unit of measurement for optical power.

19
Q

What is the reciprocal of a diopter?

A

the reciprocal of a diopter is 1/meters. I.e 3 diopters brings light into focus at 1/3 meters.

20
Q

What must also be considered with light entering the eye other than the solid structures?

A

The liquids of the eye aqueous and vitreous humour will both have different refractive indices from air and therefore will cause the light to refract.

21
Q

When the lens doesn’t form a perfect image, what is this flaw called?

A

Abberations

22
Q

Whats an example of an aberration?

A

Spherical abberation. This is when light hits the edge of the lens which is distant enough from the central axis that the light refracts more than those closer to the central axis and forms a blurred image.

23
Q

Can spherical aberration be solved?

A

Yes the body has biological processes to counter this. i.e the iris constricts reducing the diameter of the pupil and prevents rays from striking the edge of the lens.

24
Q

What are some other aberrations?

A

Comm and chroma abberations.

25
Q

The eye can change its point of focus, what does this mean?

A

The eye is a dynamic system - changing its point of focus.

26
Q

How does the lens correct for spherical aberration without pupil constriction?

A

The lens has a refractive gradient so the edge of the lens has a lower refractive index than the centre.

27
Q

Describe how accomodation occurs?

A

To focus on something closer, the lens must change its shape to accomodate this. The ciliary body muscle contract and RELAXES the zonular fibres that attach the muscle to the lens capsule. The lens becomes more spherical.

The muscle relaxes, zonular tension increases and the lens becomes flat.

This is hemholt theory.

28
Q

What is the accomodation triad?

A

The accomodation triad is a series of events that occur to put near things into focus. It includes:

1) Accomodation (Change in optical power(increase))
2) Constriction of pupils (Increase depth of field, decreased light)
3) Convergence of the eyes. (the brain forms one image)

29
Q

Where does the most optical power come from in the cornea?

A

The front. 40dioptres

30
Q

What does the pupil diameter vary between?

A

2-8mm

31
Q

Despite changing pupil size, does luminance remain constant?

A

No, this is not guaranteed.

32
Q

What are the pupils main job?

A

1) Setting the depth of field

2) Controlling abberations

33
Q

What is myopia?

A

Nearsightedness. Distant objects appear blurry as focal point is infant of the retina.

34
Q

What is hyperopia?

A

Farsightedness. Close objects appear blurry. Young people can accomodate for this and cope.

35
Q

What is astigmatism?

A

Refractive power is not uniform throughout the lens. Therefore multiple focal points can occur on the retina. Thus vision is completely blurry- with multiple variants.

36
Q

What is presbyopia?

A

Age related blindness. Caused by the inability to accomodate (ciliary muscle tire) therefore close objects appear blurry.

37
Q

What is emmetropia?

A

Normal vision.

38
Q

What does the zonular fibres attach to specifically?

A

The zonular fibres attach to the lens capsule and the ciliary processes in the pars plana.

39
Q

What is the ciliary muscle attached to?

A

The sclera spur and the storm of the choroid