What happens to light when it enters eyes?

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When it enters the eyes, is light a particle or wave? If so, what happens to this particle or wave when it is ‘seen’? Is it absorbed physically?

In: Biology

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Anonymous 0 Comments

When the photons reach the retina in the back of your eye, some of them penetrate through to the photoreceptors. These photoreceptors have a protein called rhodopsin that is embedded in the membrane, rhodopsin has a molecule inside it called 11 cis-retinal which when a photon hits it, it supplies just the right amount of energy to convert it to another isomer or another shape called 11 trans-retinal. It’s a very simple conversion, but this now allows the molecule to slip out of rhodopsin and go to the inside of the cells (photoreceptors) and activate a protein called transducin, which breaks into multiple parts, one of which goes and activates another protein called phosphodiesterase which starts to hydrolyze or break a molecule called cGMP. When cGMP becomes low in the cell, a cation channel (which means a membrane channel that allows positive charge through) closes, no longer allowing calcium and sodium ions into the cell. Now the photoreceptor is more negative inside and this negative or “hyperpolarization” wave spreads to the cell’s other end. In the absence of light, photoreceptors are constantly secreting a neurotransmitter (signal chemical) called glutamate, when the negative wave reaches the release site after there is light, glutamate stops being secreted. Then this affects the downstream cells (there many many cell circuits in the retina, and it’s quite complicated to explain) which causes a signal to be sent to your brain. You have many of these photoreceptors and their spatial organization is conserved in the representing neurons that reach your brain (visual cortex). There are also many circuits that for example inhibit the signal from nearby circuits in the retina, this allows for the sharpening of vision. And then your brain processes all this and fills in gaps from patterns and memory to produce the image you “see.”

I am not a physicist, so I don’t know about the wave/particle state of the photon as it activates retinal. But I hope I helped you understand the biology of photon to signal.

The best video animation of the whole vision process I ever saw is at https://youtu.be/AuLR0kzfwBU

Edit: English and elaboration

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