hyperopia
The medical term for it is "hyperopia".
Nearsightedness is called Myopia and farsightedness is called Hyeropia.
Nearsightedness, also known as myopia, is more common than farsightedness, also known as hyperopia.
Hyperopia is also called farsightedness. It is a common eye condition where distant objects are seen more clearly than close ones. It is typically caused by the eyeball being too short or the cornea being too flat.
Convex lenses used to correct farsightedness adjust the way light rays enter the eye, helping them to focus properly on the retina. The lens converges light before it reaches the eye's lens, allowing the image to be focused correctly on the retina, improving vision for individuals with farsightedness.
Emmetropia is when light is focused exactly on the retina and vision is perfect. Farsightedness is called hyperopia. This condition occurs when the eyeball is smaller than normal and light rays from near objects do not focus properly on the retina at the back of the eye. A person with hyperopia can see distant objects more clearly than closer objects.
The usual treatment for farsightedness is corrective lenses (spectacles or contact lenses).
Convex lenses are used to correct hyperopia, also known as farsightedness. These lenses bend light rays to focus them properly on the retina, helping those with hyperopia to see objects at a close range more clearly.
It is more properly called engraving or embellishment.
Nearsightedness is when you can only see far and farsightedness is when you can only see close.
Cow chips, or more properly, feces.
Convex lenses are typically used to correct farsightedness. These lenses help focus light onto the retina by bending it inward before it enters the eye, which improves vision for individuals with farsightedness.