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NCERT Science Class 10 - Chapter 10: The Human Eye and the Colourful World - Notes

CBSEClass 10Scienceमानव नेत्र और रंगबिरंगा संसार

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the structure and working of the human eye
  • Learn about defects of vision and their correction
  • Understand atmospheric refraction and its effects
  • Learn about dispersion of light and the formation of a rainbow

Key Concepts

The Human Eye

The eye is like a camera. Key parts:

  • Cornea: Transparent front covering; refracts most light entering the eye.
  • Iris: Coloured part; controls the size of the pupil.
  • Pupil: Opening that regulates the amount of light entering.
  • Lens: Crystalline, biconvex lens that fine-focuses light onto the retina.
  • Retina: Light-sensitive screen containing rods (dim light) and cones (colour vision). Image formed is real and inverted.
  • Optic nerve: Transmits visual signals to the brain.

Accommodation: The ability of the eye lens to change its focal length by adjusting its curvature using ciliary muscles. Near point (least distance of distinct vision) = 25 cm. Far point = infinity for a normal eye.

Defects of Vision

  • Myopia (Short-sightedness): Can see nearby objects clearly but not distant ones. Image forms before the retina. Corrected using a concave lens.
  • Hypermetropia (Long-sightedness): Can see distant objects clearly but not nearby ones. Image forms behind the retina. Corrected using a convex lens.
  • Presbyopia: Age-related loss of accommodation. Near point increases. Corrected using bifocal lenses.

Refraction Through a Prism

When white light passes through a glass prism, it splits into seven colours: Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red (VIBGYOR). This splitting is called dispersion.

Violet deviates the most (highest refractive index); Red deviates the least.

Atmospheric Refraction

Earth's atmosphere has varying density layers, causing refraction of light. Effects:

  • Twinkling of stars: Due to atmospheric refraction of starlight through turbulent layers.
  • Advanced sunrise and delayed sunset: Refraction bends sunlight when the Sun is below the horizon, making it visible about 2 minutes early/late.

Scattering of Light

Tyndall effect: Scattering of light by colloidal particles (visible beam in fog, smoke).

Blue colour of sky: Shorter wavelengths (blue) are scattered more than longer wavelengths (Rayleigh scattering).

Red colour of Sun at sunrise/sunset: Blue light is scattered away; red light (longer wavelength) reaches the observer.

Summary

The human eye uses a convex lens to focus light on the retina. Defects like myopia and hypermetropia are corrected with appropriate lenses. White light is composed of seven colours that can be separated by a prism. Atmospheric refraction causes twinkling of stars and apparent shift of celestial objects. Scattering explains the blue sky and red sunsets.

Important Terms

Accommodation
The ability of the eye lens to adjust its focal length to focus on objects at varying distances
Dispersion
Splitting of white light into its component colours by a prism
Spectrum
The band of seven colours obtained by dispersion of white light
Scattering
Deflection of light by small particles in the atmosphere

Quick Revision

  1. Near point of normal eye = 25 cm; Far point = infinity
  2. Myopia: corrected by concave lens; Hypermetropia: corrected by convex lens
  3. VIBGYOR: Violet deviates most, Red deviates least
  4. Blue sky = Rayleigh scattering of shorter wavelengths
  5. Stars twinkle due to atmospheric refraction; planets do not (larger apparent size)
NCERT Science Class 10 - Chapter 10: The Human Eye and the Colourful World - Notes | EduMunch