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🌿 The Eye

Spec 4.5.2.5 📙 Higher
📖 In-Depth Theory

Structure of the Eye

The eye is a sense organ — it detects light stimuli and converts them into electrical impulses sent to the brain via the optic nerve.
Key structures:
CORNEA — transparent, curved front surface. Refracts (bends) light — does most of the focusing (about 70% of total refraction).
IRIS — the coloured ring of muscle around the pupil. Controls the size of the PUPIL to regulate how much light enters.
PUPIL — the hole in the centre of the iris. Not a structure itself — just the opening. Lets light into the eye.
LENS — a flexible, transparent disc behind the iris. Fine-tunes focusing by changing shape (ACCOMMODATION). Held in place by suspensory ligaments attached to the ciliary body.
CILIARY MUSCLE — ring of muscle surrounding the lens. Contracts or relaxes to change the tension on the lens via the suspensory ligaments, altering the lens shape and focal length.
SUSPENSORY LIGAMENTS — fibres connecting the lens to the ciliary muscle. When ciliary muscle contracts → ligaments loosen → lens becomes more rounded (for near vision).
RETINA — the light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye. Contains two types of photoreceptor cells: RODS (sensitive to light intensity — monochrome, dim conditions) and CONES (sensitive to colour — need bright light, concentrated in the fovea).
FOVEA (yellow spot) — area of highest cone density on the retina — sharpest colour vision.
OPTIC NERVE — carries electrical impulses from the retina to the brain for processing.
BLIND SPOT — where the optic nerve exits — no photoreceptors here, so no vision in this area.

How the Eye Focuses — Accommodation

ACCOMMODATION is the process by which the lens changes shape to focus on objects at different distances.
FOCUSING ON A NEAR OBJECT:
Ciliary muscles CONTRACT.
Suspensory ligaments SLACKEN (less tension on lens).
Lens becomes more ROUNDED (more curved, fatter).
More refraction → shorter focal length → image focused on retina.
FOCUSING ON A DISTANT OBJECT:
Ciliary muscles RELAX.
Suspensory ligaments become TAUT (pull on lens).
Lens becomes FLATTER (less curved, thinner).
Less refraction → longer focal length → image focused on retina.
MEMORY AID:
Near = ciliary contracts, lens round.
Far = ciliary relaxes, lens flat.
THE PUPIL REFLEX (controlling light entry):
BRIGHT LIGHT → circular muscles of iris CONTRACT → pupil CONSTRICTS (gets smaller) → less light enters → prevents damage to retina.
DIM LIGHT → radial muscles of iris CONTRACT → pupil DILATES (gets larger) → more light enters → improves vision in low light.
⚠️ Common Mistake

For near vision: ciliary muscles CONTRACT and lens becomes more ROUNDED. For far vision: ciliary muscles RELAX and lens becomes FLATTER. Students often get this backwards. Remember: when you look at something NEAR, the ciliary muscle has to work hard (CONTRACT) to make the lens rounder.

📌 Key Note

Cornea: main refraction. Lens: fine focus (accommodation). Near: ciliary contracts → lens round. Far: ciliary relaxes → lens flat. Retina: rods (dim/mono), cones (colour/bright). Fovea: sharpest vision. Optic nerve → brain.

🎯 Matching Activity — Match the Eye Structure to its Function

Match each structure to what it does. — drag the symbols on the right to match the component names on the left.

Cornea
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Iris
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Lens
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Ciliary muscle
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Retina
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Optic nerve
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Coloured ring of muscle — controls pupil size and light entry
Light-sensitive layer — contains rods and cones that convert light to electrical signals
Carries electrical impulses from the retina to the brain
Transparent curved surface — provides most of the eye's refraction
Flexible disc — fine-tunes focus by changing shape (accommodation)
Contracts or relaxes to change lens shape via suspensory ligaments
🎯 Test Yourself
Question 1 of 2
1. A student looks from a distant window to a book close to them. What happens to the ciliary muscles and lens?
2. Why do the pupils constrict in bright light?
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