The cornea is the part of the human eye that bends light rays the most when focused on a distant object.
An eye is a complex structure and essentially all parts of the eye are required for vision to occur. However the part of the eye which detects the focused (by the lens) light image is the retina.
It will be right to say that only principles of light microscopy keeps light focused and scatters wavelengths of visible light for the human eye to see.
A laser is a beam of very strong and focused light. It is possible for this light to damage the retina of your eye permanently, and you will lose all or part of your vision.
When light enters your eye, it is focused by the cornea and the lens onto the retina at the back of the eye. The lens adjusts its shape to help focus the light onto the retina, where it is converted into neural signals that are sent to the brain for processing.
The part of the eye that reacts to light is the retina.
The Lens is the part of the eye that bends light rays .
when light enters the eye it passes through the cornea then pupil then the lens where it is bent and focused on the retina
The answer to this question is the retina .......... It's the retina because everything is upside down, bends, goes up to the brain and flips it around........and that is why the light is always focused on the retina
The lens of the eye is responsible for focusing the captured light rays before they reach the retina. The lens adjusts its shape to ensure that the light is focused accurately onto the retina, allowing for clear vision.
The retina at the back of the eye is light-sensitive.
No part of the eye "attracts" light. Light enters the eye by passing through the cornea and the aqueous humour before getting to the lens. After being focused by the lens, light passes through the vitreous humour to the retina.