an eye piece lens
I have a prosthetic eye. It's like a contact lens, and it goes in similar to a contact lens
Because the lens is really liquidy and jelly-like, it is the only part of the eye that shakes like jello!
The iris acts like the aperture of a camera lens.
The cornea or lens of the eye.
the lenses make objects look smaller than what they are so that people know what they look like.
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.
The muscles around the lens of your eye push and pull it thicker and thinner to focus your eye on an object depending on the distance from your eye to the object. The focal length of a fat lens is shorter than the focal length of a thin lens (the light rays are bent more sharply) When you focus binoculars, you are adjusting their focal length
The lens of the eye is covered by the cornea, a clear outer covering that helps to focus light onto the retina at the back of the eye.
Yes it is a convex lens just like the one in your eye! A convex lens goes outwards but a concave lens goes inwards (like a cave). Simple! :-) xoxo
No he does not. His right eye is like that because of a contact lens as part of his gimmick. (:
The lens closest to the eye in a microscope is called the eyepiece or ocular lens. It is where the viewer looks through to observe the magnified image of the specimen being examined.