ChatterBank6 mins ago
beams of light
When you squint while you are looking at a light, you can see a straight beam going through the light. The angle of this beam changes as you move your head from side to side. I want to know what the science is regarding these beams, please.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Marijn. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't get worried, notafish. It's a perfectly normal phenomenon which I can reproduce anytime. I thinks it's because your eyelashes are producing a vertical slit for the light to pass through - which is why the line follows the direction of your eyelashes as you turn your head. Try this:
Look at a light, squint, get your eyelashes out of the way and you'll find the effect disappears. Moving the upper lashes is not too difficult but the lower ones are tricky. Still, when you succeed you'll see a clear light with no lines.
Look at a light, squint, get your eyelashes out of the way and you'll find the effect disappears. Moving the upper lashes is not too difficult but the lower ones are tricky. Still, when you succeed you'll see a clear light with no lines.