Examples of pupil in the following topics:
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- As soon as the eye moves, it re-adjusts its exposure, both chemically and geometrically, by adjusting the iris (which regulates the size of the pupil).
- The pupil of the human eye is its aperture.
- Refraction in the cornea causes the effective aperture (the entrance pupil) to differ slightly from the physical pupil diameter.
- The entrance pupil is typically about 4 mm in diameter, although it can range from 2 mm (f/8.3) in a brightly lit place to 8 mm (f/2.1) in the dark.
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- In the middle of the iris is the pupil, the black dot that changes size.
- The fundus is on the opposite of the pupil, but inside the eye and can not be seen without special instruments.
- All of these are connected by the pupil.
- Whenever the eye moves, even just a little, it automatically readjusts the exposure by adjusting the iris, which regulates the size of the pupil.
- The pupil serves this function, and the iris is the aperture stop.
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- In the middle of the iris is the pupil, which is the black dot that changes size.
- The fundus is on the opposite of the pupil, but inside the eye and cannot be seen without special instruments.
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- This same effect happens when light passes through our pupils, and this is why the human eye has limited acuity.