Light

Cards (22)

  • Light enters the eye through the pupil, which is controlled by the iris.
  • The lens focuses light onto the retina at the back of the eye.
  • The human eye is an optical instrument that allows us to see.
  • The cornea refracts (bends) incoming light rays to focus them on the retina.
  • The ciliary muscles control the shape of the lens, allowing it to change its curvature and adjust the focal length of the eye.
  • The iris controls the amount of light entering the eye.
  • The iris controls the amount of light entering the eye by adjusting its size.
  • The cornea covers the front part of the eyeball and helps focus incoming light rays on the retina.
  • Light travels in a straight line
  • Refraction occurs when light changes direction as it passes through different mediums with varying densities
  • Light travels at 186,000 miles (300,000 km) per second,
  • Light is made up of electromagnetic waves that travel in all directions from their source.
  • Infrared radiation has longer wavelengths than visible light but shorter ones than radio waves.
  • Visible light has wavelengths between 400 nanometers (violet) to 750 nanometers (red).
  • Radio waves have the longest wavelengths of any type of EM wave.
  • Gamma rays are the shortest wavelengths of all types of electromagnetic radiation.
  • X-rays have still shorter wavelengths than ultraviolet radiation.
  • Ultraviolet radiation has even shorter wavelengths than those of violet light.
  • The speed of light is constant regardless of its frequency or intensity.
  • When an object absorbs energy from sunlight, it heats up due to the transfer of kinetic energy from photons to molecules within the object.
  • The speed of light is constant regardless of its direction or the observer's motion.
  • Electromagnetic waves can be described as transverse waves because they oscillate perpendicular to the direction of energy transfer.