If You Had A Twin, But Didn't Realise...
Family Life1 min ago
Say it is dark outside. You have a little bit of light comeing in, VERY little. Your sitting in a room for example looking at a desk. You see somthing out of the corner of your eye, but when u look over to look at it, you can't see it, or you can't see it as clear as you did when u weren't looking at it directly. Why is it that you can make somthing out more clear in the dark with the side of your eye then looking at it directly?
Thanx all.
No best answer has yet been selected by kermit911. 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.You eye has two types of receptors on the retina, cones and rods. Cones come in 3 flavours to sense the three primary colours, rods only sense black and white but are more sensitive.
Immediately opposite your pupil is the area of your retina where you sense the image from straight ahead - this is what you use when you are looking directly at something - it only contains cones.
This means that you have a better ability to sense objects under low light conditions in your peripheral vision.
Before CCD sensors Astronomers used this and, when using telesopes on faint objects would look slightly away from the object of interest - no, it's not easy and there is a knack to it.
A shrewd observation, kermit. The reason lies in the distribution of the light-sensitive cells lining your retinas: the "rods" and the "cones". Rod cells are very sensitive to the level of light falling on them and are distributed all over the surface of the retina, except the centre part (called the fovea). Cone cells are less sensitive than the rods, but come in three types: those sensitive to long-, middle-, and short-wavelength radiation (often referred to as the red, green and blue cones respectively) allowing colour vision. Almost all of the cones on the retina are located at the tiny fovea (the centre of vision), which is composed entirely of cones. This allows for high-resolution vision and excellent colour perception of whatever you are looking directly at. However, in low light conditions, the cones do not receive enough light to function, so the rods must take over. This is why your vision seems blurred/fuzzy at night - the density of rods on the retina is very low compared to the density of cones at the fovea (similar to turning your desktop resolution down to 640x480, instead of 1600x1200). And since there are no rods at the fovea at all, low-light sensitivity at the centre of vision becomes very poor. So at night time, you can make out objects fairly well provided that the light from the objects is not focused onto your foveas, i.e. you can see things at night only if you do not look directly at them.
There is an excellent explanation here:
http://mbb.harvard.edu/evolution_of_mind_and_brain/chapt er_2.pdf