File:EB1911 Vision - Reflected Images in the Eye.jpg
EB1911_Vision_-_Reflected_Images_in_the_Eye.jpg (275 × 317 pixels, file size: 88 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
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editDescriptionEB1911 Vision - Reflected Images in the Eye.jpg |
English: If we hold a lighted candle in front and a little to the side of an eye to be examined, three reflections may be seen in the eye, as represented in fig. 12 . The first, a, is erect, large and bright, from the anterior surface of the cornea; the second, b, also erect, but dim, from the anterior surface of the crystalline lens; and the third, c, inverted, and very dim, from the posterior surface of the lens, or perhaps the concave surface of the vitreous humour to which the convex surface of the lens is adapted. |
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Date | published 1911 | ||||
Source | “Vision,” Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), v. 28, 1911, p. 134, fig. 12. | ||||
Author | Unknown artistUnknown artist | ||||
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current | 23:18, 4 September 2021 | 275 × 317 (88 KB) | Bob Burkhardt (talk | contribs) | {{Information |description = {{en|1=If we hold a lighted candle in front and a little to the side of an eye to be examined, three reflections may be seen in the eye, as represented in fig. 12 . The first, ''a'', is erect, large and bright, from the anterior surface of the cornea; the second, ''b'', also erect, but dim, from the anterior surface of the crystalline lens; and the third, ''c'', inverted, and very dim, from the posterior surface of the lens, or perhaps the concave surface of the v... |
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