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a lens works when light goes through it and refracts (bends) inside the lens. so the light basically refracts inside the lens.
A camera lens uses refraction to focus light on the film, or in a digital camera on the CCD or other light-sensitive array. When a ray of light passes from a less dense to a more dense medium (such as from air to glass) it slows down. If it strikes the glass surface at an angle, it is also bent a little, and this is called refraction. When it passes back into air, it speeds up again, and is again refracted if the surface is at an angle. This makes it possible to design a curved piece of glass that will focus a parallel beam of light (arriving perpendicular to the lens, that is along its axis) to a point. The ideal surfaces are parabolas (or you can use one flat surface and one parabola, this is a plano-convex lens). When you use a magnifying glass to focus the sun's rays and set paper on fire, that's the effect you are using. The interesting thing happens when the light rays are parallel to each other but not parallel to the axis through the centre of the lens. Just take it on trust for a moment, this same lens will also focus these, but to a point above, below or beside the focal point for rays along the axis, and all these points of focus of parallel rays will form a plane, called the focal plane of the lens. So, you put the film at this focal plane, and you've now used the lens to concentrate the light on the film, and form an image. That will only work for objects far enough away that the light rays are roughly parallel to each other. For closer objects, you need to move the film a little closer to the lens. That's what happens when you focus a camera (or autofocus does this for you). The bigger the lens, the more concentrated the light, but the more critical focussing becomes. So, camera lenses have a second control, the iris or f-stop, that changes the size of the lens by masking the outer bits of it. It's a compromise between getting lots of light and making the focus more forgiving. If you use a very small lens, lots of things will be in focus. That's called depth of field. Whew! Still there? Camera lenses are normally made of four or more bits of glass or plastic, because this ideal one-piece lens doesn't work for two reasons. Firstly, the amount of bend depends on the colour. This is called chromatic aberration. Secondly, in practice it's hard to make parabolic lenses, but far easier to make spherical ones, which are close to ideal in the middle but get fuzzier as the lens gets bigger. This is called spherical aberration. Both of these can be corrected by using compound lenses, that is lenses made of more than one element - but never perfectly. Next, we can look at zoom lenses, or retrofocus lenses (a way of designing lenses to make them more compact). But that's probably enough for now.

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11y ago
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10y ago

The crystalline lens can be defined as a transparent, biconvex structure in the eye that, alone with the cornea, helps to refract light to be focused on the retina. The lens, by changing shape, functions to change the focal distance of the eye so it can focus on the object at a distance, allowing a sharp real image of the object of interest to be formed on the retina.

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12y ago

the lens in your eye work by focusing the image on the retina.

By : Michelle garcia .... D.O.B.... December 6 1999

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12y ago

the lens focuses all of the light onto one point at the back of the retina

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12y ago

The lens focuses light by bending the light to make it strike the retina in the right angle

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11y ago

The lens of the eye focuses the incoming image onto the retina.

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13y ago

A transparent device of the eye that focuses light rays entering through he pupil to form an imagine on the retina.

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11y ago

The eye changes area of focus by adjusting the distance between the retina and the lense.

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Q: How does the lens of an eye focus?
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Related questions

What structure changes its shape to focus light at the back of the eye?

The lens of the eye also called the crystalline lens.


What type of lens is the lens of your eye?

The lens in the human eye is a convex lens, but it is flexible and when it is acted on by the ciliary muscle around it, the lens can be "flattened" to change the focus, or, when the muscle is relaxed, the lens can assume a more spherical shape. This is at the heart of the ability of the eye to focus on objects nearer or farther away.


Which part of the eye is clear tissue that helps the eye to focus?

the lens


How does the eye lens focus?

Muscles in the eye surrounding the lens contract stretching it out, flattening it; or relax, letting it thicken. These changes in shape refocus the lens.


What is the difference between the pinhole camer and the human eye?

The pinhole camera has no lens. The human eye has a variable-focus lens.


Why are concave lens used in spectacles?

Because they alter the focus of the lens in the patients eye, to correct their vision.


What does the elasticity of the eye's lens allow for?

This elasticity allows the lens to focus on both near and far objects.


What kind of lens is in a cow's eye?

The lens in a cows eye is flexible and clear. The flexible lens is able to change shape which allows it to better focus on objects.


Eye structure which allows lens to focus by changing shape?

the corena


What is the lens of the eyes?

the lens is what the eye uses to focus an image on the retina.function of the eye lense is is to adjust the focal length of the eye so it can make a real and sharp image of object


Structure in eye which focus light by bending or changing thickness?

Both the cornea (hard outer tissue) and the lens (farther inside) curve light rays that fall on the outer eye and direct them toward the retina. The lens is adjusted by muscles in the eye, while the cornea has a fixed focus.


Like your eye a camera has a lens that focuses light to form an image But unlike your eye the lens of camera is moved back-and-forth to focus light?

Actually, the lens on your eye moves just like the lens of a camera to focus light. People who are nearsighted or farsighted have trouble focusing on objects that are very close or very far away. Since the lens on your eye isn't as big as the lens on a camera, it's just harder to observe it moving.