Human Eye and Vision Defects – Complete Notes, Derivations, PYQs & Numericals
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HUMAN EYE AND VISION DEFECTS – COMPLETE NOTES, DERIVATIONS, PYQs & NUMERICALS

NCERT-aligned anatomy, accommodation, range of vision, myopia, hypermetropia, presbyopia, astigmatism, corrective-lens power and exam practice.

NEET + JEE theoryTextbook-style SVG diagrams24 solved numericalsToggle solutionsRevision sheet

1. Human Eye

The human eye is a biological optical instrument. Its cornea and crystalline lens form a real, inverted and diminished image on the retina. Photoreceptors convert the image into nerve signals, which the brain interprets as vision.

Optical system
Cornea, aqueous humour, lens and vitreous humour refract light.
Aperture control
Iris controls pupil diameter and retinal illumination.
Focusing
Ciliary muscles change lens curvature during accommodation.
Detection
Rods provide dim-light vision; cones provide colour and fine detail.

Key optical facts

Retinal image: realRetinal image: invertedNormal near point: 25 cmNormal far point: ∞Image distance nearly fixedPower changes by accommodation

2. Structure of the Eye

Cornea Aqueous humour Iris Pupil Crystalline lens Ciliary muscles Suspensory ligaments Vitreous humour Retina Yellow spot Blind spot Optic nerve Sclerotic Choroid

Wide labelled cross-section of the human eye.

Cornea
Transparent curved front surface; supplies most of the eye's fixed refracting power.
Iris and pupil
Iris is a muscular diaphragm; pupil is its adjustable opening.
Crystalline lens
Flexible biconvex lens that fine-tunes focus.
Ciliary muscles
Change tension on suspensory ligaments and alter lens curvature.
Retina
Light-sensitive layer containing rods and cones.
Yellow spot
Foveal region of maximum visual acuity and cone density.
Blind spot
Optic-disc region without photoreceptors.
Optic nerve
Carries encoded visual information to the brain.
Humours
Aqueous and vitreous humours transmit light and maintain shape.
Sclerotic
Tough outer coat that protects and maintains the eyeball.
Choroid
Pigmented vascular layer that nourishes the retina and suppresses internal reflection.
Suspensory ligaments
Transmit ciliary-muscle action to the lens capsule.

3. Accommodation

Accommodation is the ability to keep the retinal image sharp while object distance changes. The lens-to-retina distance is nearly fixed, so the eye changes lens power.

A. Focusing parallel rays from infinity From far point at u = ∞ I Relaxed ciliary muscles; thinner lens B. Focusing rays from near point N u = 25 cm N I Contracted ciliary muscles; thicker lens
Distant object
Ciliary muscles relax, ligaments become taut, lens becomes thinner, focal length increases and power decreases.
Near object
Ciliary muscles contract, ligament tension reduces, lens becomes thicker, focal length decreases and power increases.
Amplitude of accommodation = 1/N − 1/F
N and F are near- and far-point distances in metres.

Four solved numericals

1Accommodation range

Question: A normal eye has near point 25 cm and far point infinity. Find the range of accommodation in dioptres.

Show complete solution
Given
Near point=0.25 m; far point=∞
Formula
ΔP=1/N−1/F
Substitution
ΔP=1/0.25−0
Calculation
4−0=4 D

Final answer: 4 D

Exam tip: Use reciprocal distances in metres.

2Near point shift

Question: A person's near point is 50 cm. What additional power is needed to read at 25 cm?

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−0.50 m
Formula
P=1/f=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−2−(−4)
Calculation
P=+2 D

Final answer: +2 D convex lens

Exam tip: Virtual image must be at the person's near point.

3Retinal image scale

Question: An eye of effective image distance 17 mm views an object subtending 2°. Estimate retinal image height.

Show complete solution
Given
v=17 mm, θ=2°
Formula
h≈v tanθ
Substitution
h=17 tan2°
Calculation
h≈0.594 mm

Final answer: 0.59 mm

Exam tip: Use angular size, not object distance.

4Power of relaxed eye

Question: Estimate power if effective focal length is 17 mm.

Show complete solution
Given
f=0.017 m
Formula
P=1/f
Substitution
P=1/0.017
Calculation
58.82 D

Final answer: ≈58.8 D

Exam tip: The eye's total optical power is large.

4. Range of Normal Vision

The range of vision extends from the near point to the far point. For a normal young adult, the conventional values are 25 cm and infinity. An object closer than the near point demands more power than the eye can provide.

Object placed inside the normal near point u < 25 cm O Blurred patch on retina Image would form behind retina Object within 25 cm is not focused on retina and appears blurred.
Why blur occurs: the rays are still too divergent after maximum accommodation. They do not meet as a point on the retina, producing a blur circle.

5. Myopia (Short-Sightedness)

In myopia, nearby objects are clear but distant objects are blurred. Parallel rays focus before the retina because the eye has excessive converging power, the eyeball is too long, or both.

A. Myopic eye viewing a distant object I R: retina B. Far point F of a myopic eye F I on retina
C. Correction of myopia Concave lens causes rays to diverge as if coming from F. F Concave lens I

Corrective-lens derivation

  1. A distant object has u=−∞.
  2. The concave lens must create a virtual image at the myopic far point: v=−x.
  3. Using 1/f=1/v−1/u, we get 1/f=−1/x.
  4. Since lens power is P=1/f with f in metres, the correcting power is negative.
f = −x    and    P = −1/x dioptre
x must be in metres.

Four solved numericals

1Myopia far point

Question: A myopic eye has far point 80 cm. Find correcting lens power.

Show complete solution
Given
x=0.80 m
Formula
P=−1/x
Substitution
P=−1/0.80
Calculation
−1.25 D

Final answer: −1.25 D

Exam tip: Concave power is negative.

2Myopia spectacle focal length

Question: A lens of power −2.5 D corrects myopia. Find focal length.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−2.5 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=1/(−2.5)
Calculation
−0.40 m

Final answer: −40 cm

Exam tip: Convert metres to centimetres at the end.

3Myopia exact object distance

Question: Far point is 1 m. Find spectacle image position for a distant object.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−∞, f=−1 m
Formula
1/f=1/v−1/u
Substitution
−1=1/v
Calculation
v=−1 m

Final answer: Virtual image 1 m in front of lens

Exam tip: The corrective lens maps infinity to the far point.

4Contact lens vs spectacles

Question: A −4 D contact lens is needed. Estimate its focal length.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−4 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=−0.25 m
Calculation
−25 cm

Final answer: −25 cm

Exam tip: Vertex distance corrections matter at high powers.

6. Hypermetropia (Long-Sightedness)

In hypermetropia, distant vision may be clear but a near object cannot be focused with available accommodation. The uncorrected image would form behind the retina due to insufficient power or a short eyeball.

A. Normal near point N = 25 cm N I B. Hypermetropic eye viewing an object at 25 cm Its own near point N′ lies farther than 25 cm. N Rays would meet behind retina
C. Correction of hypermetropia Convex lens converges rays so they appear to come from N′. N N′ Convex lens I

Reading-glass derivation

  1. Place the object at the normal near point: u=−25 cm=−D.
  2. If the hypermetropic near point is Dh, the convex lens must form a virtual image there: v=−Dh.
  3. Using 1/f=1/v−1/u: 1/f=−1/Dh+1/D.
  4. Convert all distances to metres before using P=1/f.
P = 1/D − 1/Dh
D=0.25 m; Dh is the hypermetropic near-point distance.

Four solved numericals

1Hypermetropia near point

Question: Near point is 100 cm. Find power to read at 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−1 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−1−(−4)
Calculation
+3 D

Final answer: +3 D

Exam tip: Correcting lens forms a virtual image at N′.

2Hypermetropia N′=50 cm

Question: Find reading-glass power for near point 50 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−0.50 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−2+4
Calculation
2 D

Final answer: +2 D

Exam tip: Convex lens increases convergence.

3Find hypermetropic near point

Question: A +1.5 D lens allows reading at 25 cm. Find unaided near point.

Show complete solution
Given
P=1/v−1/u
Formula
1.5=1/v+4
Substitution
1/v=−2.5
Calculation
v=−0.40 m

Final answer: Near point 40 cm

Exam tip: The image is virtual, so v is negative.

4Combined distance and reading correction

Question: A person needs +1 D for distance and +2.5 D addition for reading. Find near segment power.

Show complete solution
Given
Pnear=Pdistance+Padd
Formula
Pnear=1+2.5
Substitution
3.5 D
Calculation
3.5 D

Final answer: +3.5 D

Exam tip: Bifocal near segment includes the distance prescription.

7. Presbyopia

Presbyopia is the age-related recession of the near point. Lens elasticity decreases and ciliary-muscle performance may weaken, reducing accommodation. It may occur together with myopia or hypermetropia.

Presbyopia: near point shifts away as accommodation decreases 25 cm N′ Ageing eye cannot supply enough additional power for near work. Bifocal lens Upper part:distance vision Lower convex part:near vision
Symptoms
Reading material must be held farther away; near work causes strain.
Correction
Convex reading addition, bifocals, progressive lenses or suitable multifocals.
Bifocal design
Upper portion commonly serves distance; lower portion provides extra positive power for near work.

Four solved numericals

1Presbyopia addition

Question: Near point has receded to 80 cm; find reading addition for 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25, v=−0.80 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−1.25+4
Calculation
2.75 D

Final answer: +2.75 D

Exam tip: Presbyopia is loss of accommodation.

2Accommodation loss

Question: Near point changes from 25 cm to 100 cm. Find loss of accommodation.

Show complete solution
Given
N1=0.25 m,N2=1 m
Formula
Loss=1/N1−1/N2
Substitution
4−1
Calculation
3 D

Final answer: 3 D

Exam tip: Far point assumed infinity.

3Bifocal upper segment

Question: A presbyopic myope has far point 2 m. Find upper-segment power.

Show complete solution
Given
x=2 m
Formula
P=−1/x
Substitution
P=−1/2
Calculation
−0.5 D

Final answer: −0.5 D

Exam tip: Upper segment corrects distance vision.

4Bifocal lower addition

Question: The same person has near point 1 m while wearing distance correction. Find reading addition for 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
N′=1 m
Formula
Padd=1/0.25−1/1
Substitution
4−1
Calculation
3 D

Final answer: +3 D addition

Exam tip: Addition is combined with the distance segment.

8. Astigmatism

In regular astigmatism, different principal meridians of the cornea or lens have different powers. A point object does not produce one point focus. A cylindrical lens adds power in one meridian while leaving its axis meridian unchanged.

A. Astigmatic eye: unequal power in perpendicular meridians Line/elliptical blur on retina B. Correction using a cylindrical lens Cylindrical lens Clear point image on retina
Cylinder-axis rule: a cylindrical lens has zero cylinder power along its stated axis and full cylinder power in the perpendicular meridian.

Four solved numericals

1Cylinder power

Question: An astigmatic prescription is −1.50 DC at axis 180°. State focal length in powered meridian.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−1.50 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=−0.667 m
Calculation
−66.7 cm

Final answer: −0.667 m

Exam tip: Cylinder has zero power along its axis.

2Power meridians

Question: Prescription +2.00 DS/−1.00 DC ×180°. Find powers in principal meridians.

Show complete solution
Given
Sphere=+2, cylinder=−1
Formula
Paxis=Ps; Pperp=Ps+Pc
Substitution
2; 2−1
Calculation
+2 D and +1 D

Final answer: +2 D at 180°, +1 D at 90°

Exam tip: Cylinder acts 90° from its axis.

3Spherical equivalent

Question: Find spherical equivalent of +1.00 DS/−2.00 DC.

Show complete solution
Given
S=+1,C=−2
Formula
SE=S+C/2
Substitution
1−1
Calculation
0 D

Final answer: Plano spherical equivalent

Exam tip: SE does not replace full astigmatic correction.

4Convert notation

Question: Transpose +2.00 DS/−1.50 DC ×180°.

Show complete solution
Given
S′=S+C; C′=−C; axis′=axis±90°
Formula
S′=0.50,C′=+1.50,axis=90°
Substitution
Calculation
Equivalent prescription

Final answer: +0.50 DS/+1.50 DC ×90°

Exam tip: Both forms have identical principal powers.

9. Colour Blindness and Cataract

Colour blindness

A colour-vision deficiency usually arises from absent or altered cone photopigments. Red-green deficiency is commonly inherited and X-linked. It is tested using pseudo-isochromatic plates. Ordinary spherical spectacles do not restore missing cone function.

Colour blindness: cone-cell defect Retina: simplified cone mosaic Absent or altered cone photopigment Usually red-green difficulty; ordinary lenses do not correct it.

Cataract

A cataract is clouding of the crystalline lens, causing reduced contrast, glare and blurred vision. It is not merely a focusing error. Clinically significant cataracts are commonly treated by replacing the cloudy lens with an intraocular lens.

Cataract Cloudy lens scatters light; retinal image is blurred. Correction: surgical replacement by an artificial intraocular lens.

10. Derivations and Corrective-Lens Power

Relation between focal length and power

Lens power measures vergence produced per metre. By definition, when focal length f is measured in metres:

P = 1/f    dioptre
Convex: P>0; concave: P<0.

Thin lenses in contact

  1. For lens 1: 1/v−1/u=P₁.
  2. The intermediate image acts as object for lens 2.
  3. Adding the two vergence changes cancels the intermediate distance.
P = P₁ + P₂ + P₃ + ...

Two separated thin lenses

P = P₁ + P₂ − dP₁P₂
d is separation in metres.

Four solved combination numericals

1Lens combination

Question: Two thin lenses +2 D and −0.5 D are in contact. Find total power.

Show complete solution
Given
P1=2,P2=−0.5
Formula
P=P1+P2
Substitution
2−0.5
Calculation
1.5 D

Final answer: +1.5 D

Exam tip: Powers add only for lenses in contact.

2Combined focal length

Question: Find focal length of +3 D and +2 D lenses in contact.

Show complete solution
Given
P=5 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=1/5
Calculation
0.20 m

Final answer: 20 cm

Exam tip: Use algebraic signs.

3Separated lenses

Question: +4 D and −2 D lenses are separated by 5 cm. Find equivalent power.

Show complete solution
Given
P1=4,P2=−2,d=0.05 m
Formula
P=P1+P2−dP1P2
Substitution
4−2−0.05(4)(−2)
Calculation
2.4 D

Final answer: +2.4 D

Exam tip: Include separation only when specified.

4Power conversion

Question: A corrective lens has focal length +40 cm. Find power.

Show complete solution
Given
f=+0.40 m
Formula
P=1/f
Substitution
1/0.40
Calculation
2.5 D

Final answer: +2.5 D

Exam tip: Never use centimetres directly in P=1/f.

11. Important Formula Sheet

Accommodation

A = 1/N − 1/F

Lens power

P = 1/f(m)

Myopia

P = −1/x

Hypermetropia

P = 1/D − 1/N′

Lenses in contact

P = ΣPᵢ

Separated lenses

P = P₁+P₂−dP₁P₂
ConditionImage without correctionCorrective lensPower sign
MyopiaIn front of retina for distant objectConcaveNegative
HypermetropiaBehind retina for near objectConvexPositive
PresbyopiaNear focus inadequatePositive addition / multifocalUsually positive addition
AstigmatismDifferent meridional fociCylindrical / spherocylindricalDepends on prescription

12. Solved Numerical Bank

Twenty-four complete solutions spanning accommodation, myopia, hypermetropia, presbyopia, astigmatism and lens combinations.

1Accommodation range

Question: A normal eye has near point 25 cm and far point infinity. Find the range of accommodation in dioptres.

Show complete solution
Given
Near point=0.25 m; far point=∞
Formula
ΔP=1/N−1/F
Substitution
ΔP=1/0.25−0
Calculation
4−0=4 D

Final answer: 4 D

Exam tip: Use reciprocal distances in metres.

2Near point shift

Question: A person's near point is 50 cm. What additional power is needed to read at 25 cm?

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−0.50 m
Formula
P=1/f=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−2−(−4)
Calculation
P=+2 D

Final answer: +2 D convex lens

Exam tip: Virtual image must be at the person's near point.

3Retinal image scale

Question: An eye of effective image distance 17 mm views an object subtending 2°. Estimate retinal image height.

Show complete solution
Given
v=17 mm, θ=2°
Formula
h≈v tanθ
Substitution
h=17 tan2°
Calculation
h≈0.594 mm

Final answer: 0.59 mm

Exam tip: Use angular size, not object distance.

4Power of relaxed eye

Question: Estimate power if effective focal length is 17 mm.

Show complete solution
Given
f=0.017 m
Formula
P=1/f
Substitution
P=1/0.017
Calculation
58.82 D

Final answer: ≈58.8 D

Exam tip: The eye's total optical power is large.

5Myopia far point

Question: A myopic eye has far point 80 cm. Find correcting lens power.

Show complete solution
Given
x=0.80 m
Formula
P=−1/x
Substitution
P=−1/0.80
Calculation
−1.25 D

Final answer: −1.25 D

Exam tip: Concave power is negative.

6Myopia spectacle focal length

Question: A lens of power −2.5 D corrects myopia. Find focal length.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−2.5 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=1/(−2.5)
Calculation
−0.40 m

Final answer: −40 cm

Exam tip: Convert metres to centimetres at the end.

7Myopia exact object distance

Question: Far point is 1 m. Find spectacle image position for a distant object.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−∞, f=−1 m
Formula
1/f=1/v−1/u
Substitution
−1=1/v
Calculation
v=−1 m

Final answer: Virtual image 1 m in front of lens

Exam tip: The corrective lens maps infinity to the far point.

8Contact lens vs spectacles

Question: A −4 D contact lens is needed. Estimate its focal length.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−4 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=−0.25 m
Calculation
−25 cm

Final answer: −25 cm

Exam tip: Vertex distance corrections matter at high powers.

9Hypermetropia near point

Question: Near point is 100 cm. Find power to read at 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−1 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−1−(−4)
Calculation
+3 D

Final answer: +3 D

Exam tip: Correcting lens forms a virtual image at N′.

10Hypermetropia N′=50 cm

Question: Find reading-glass power for near point 50 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25 m, v=−0.50 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−2+4
Calculation
2 D

Final answer: +2 D

Exam tip: Convex lens increases convergence.

11Find hypermetropic near point

Question: A +1.5 D lens allows reading at 25 cm. Find unaided near point.

Show complete solution
Given
P=1/v−1/u
Formula
1.5=1/v+4
Substitution
1/v=−2.5
Calculation
v=−0.40 m

Final answer: Near point 40 cm

Exam tip: The image is virtual, so v is negative.

12Combined distance and reading correction

Question: A person needs +1 D for distance and +2.5 D addition for reading. Find near segment power.

Show complete solution
Given
Pnear=Pdistance+Padd
Formula
Pnear=1+2.5
Substitution
3.5 D
Calculation
3.5 D

Final answer: +3.5 D

Exam tip: Bifocal near segment includes the distance prescription.

13Presbyopia addition

Question: Near point has receded to 80 cm; find reading addition for 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
u=−0.25, v=−0.80 m
Formula
P=1/v−1/u
Substitution
P=−1.25+4
Calculation
2.75 D

Final answer: +2.75 D

Exam tip: Presbyopia is loss of accommodation.

14Accommodation loss

Question: Near point changes from 25 cm to 100 cm. Find loss of accommodation.

Show complete solution
Given
N1=0.25 m,N2=1 m
Formula
Loss=1/N1−1/N2
Substitution
4−1
Calculation
3 D

Final answer: 3 D

Exam tip: Far point assumed infinity.

15Bifocal upper segment

Question: A presbyopic myope has far point 2 m. Find upper-segment power.

Show complete solution
Given
x=2 m
Formula
P=−1/x
Substitution
P=−1/2
Calculation
−0.5 D

Final answer: −0.5 D

Exam tip: Upper segment corrects distance vision.

16Bifocal lower addition

Question: The same person has near point 1 m while wearing distance correction. Find reading addition for 25 cm.

Show complete solution
Given
N′=1 m
Formula
Padd=1/0.25−1/1
Substitution
4−1
Calculation
3 D

Final answer: +3 D addition

Exam tip: Addition is combined with the distance segment.

17Cylinder power

Question: An astigmatic prescription is −1.50 DC at axis 180°. State focal length in powered meridian.

Show complete solution
Given
P=−1.50 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=−0.667 m
Calculation
−66.7 cm

Final answer: −0.667 m

Exam tip: Cylinder has zero power along its axis.

18Power meridians

Question: Prescription +2.00 DS/−1.00 DC ×180°. Find powers in principal meridians.

Show complete solution
Given
Sphere=+2, cylinder=−1
Formula
Paxis=Ps; Pperp=Ps+Pc
Substitution
2; 2−1
Calculation
+2 D and +1 D

Final answer: +2 D at 180°, +1 D at 90°

Exam tip: Cylinder acts 90° from its axis.

19Spherical equivalent

Question: Find spherical equivalent of +1.00 DS/−2.00 DC.

Show complete solution
Given
S=+1,C=−2
Formula
SE=S+C/2
Substitution
1−1
Calculation
0 D

Final answer: Plano spherical equivalent

Exam tip: SE does not replace full astigmatic correction.

20Convert notation

Question: Transpose +2.00 DS/−1.50 DC ×180°.

Show complete solution
Given
S′=S+C; C′=−C; axis′=axis±90°
Formula
S′=0.50,C′=+1.50,axis=90°
Substitution
Calculation
Equivalent prescription

Final answer: +0.50 DS/+1.50 DC ×90°

Exam tip: Both forms have identical principal powers.

21Lens combination

Question: Two thin lenses +2 D and −0.5 D are in contact. Find total power.

Show complete solution
Given
P1=2,P2=−0.5
Formula
P=P1+P2
Substitution
2−0.5
Calculation
1.5 D

Final answer: +1.5 D

Exam tip: Powers add only for lenses in contact.

22Combined focal length

Question: Find focal length of +3 D and +2 D lenses in contact.

Show complete solution
Given
P=5 D
Formula
f=1/P
Substitution
f=1/5
Calculation
0.20 m

Final answer: 20 cm

Exam tip: Use algebraic signs.

23Separated lenses

Question: +4 D and −2 D lenses are separated by 5 cm. Find equivalent power.

Show complete solution
Given
P1=4,P2=−2,d=0.05 m
Formula
P=P1+P2−dP1P2
Substitution
4−2−0.05(4)(−2)
Calculation
2.4 D

Final answer: +2.4 D

Exam tip: Include separation only when specified.

24Power conversion

Question: A corrective lens has focal length +40 cm. Find power.

Show complete solution
Given
f=+0.40 m
Formula
P=1/f
Substitution
1/0.40
Calculation
2.5 D

Final answer: +2.5 D

Exam tip: Never use centimetres directly in P=1/f.

13. Question Bank

Exam-style practice: these are original questions based on recurring board, NEET, JEE, IB, IGCSE, ICSE and British-curriculum patterns; no unverified exact-year claim is made.

CBSE Board Questions

1Draw and label the main parts of the human eye.

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: The diagram must include cornea, iris, pupil, crystalline lens, ciliary muscles, retina, yellow spot, blind spot, optic nerve, aqueous and vitreous humours, choroid and sclerotic.

2What is accommodation?

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: Accommodation is the eye's ability to change lens curvature and power so objects at different distances remain focused on the retina.

3Define near point and far point.

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: Near point is the nearest point seen clearly; for a normal eye it is 25 cm. Far point is the farthest clear point; for a normal eye it is infinity.

4Explain myopia and its correction.

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: A myopic eye focuses distant rays in front of the retina. A concave lens diverges incident rays so they appear to come from the far point and are then focused on the retina.

5Explain hypermetropia and its correction.

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: A hypermetropic eye would focus a near object's rays behind the retina. A convex lens pre-converges the rays and creates a virtual object at the defective eye's near point.

6Differentiate myopia and hypermetropia.

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: Myopia affects distance vision and uses a concave lens; hypermetropia affects near vision and uses a convex lens.

7What is presbyopia?

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: An age-related reduction of accommodation due to loss of lens elasticity and weakening of ciliary muscles.

NEET PYQ-Style Questions

1The image formed on the retina is

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: real, inverted and diminished

2The amount of light entering the eye is controlled by

Show answer
Answer and short explanation: iris and pupil

3Myopia is corrected by

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Answer and short explanation: a concave lens

4Hypermetropia is corrected by

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Answer and short explanation: a convex lens

5The normal near point is

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Answer and short explanation: 25 cm

6The normal far point is

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Answer and short explanation: infinity

7The power of a −50 cm lens is

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Answer and short explanation: −2 D

8The region of sharpest vision is

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Answer and short explanation: yellow spot or fovea

9A cylindrical lens corrects

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Answer and short explanation: astigmatism

10Colour blindness commonly results from

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Answer and short explanation: defective or missing cone photopigments

JEE Main PYQ-Style Questions

1Cataract is

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Answer and short explanation: clouding of the crystalline lens

2Accommodation decreases mainly because of

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Answer and short explanation: reduced lens elasticity with age

3For a myopic far point x metres, correction power is

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Answer and short explanation: −1/x dioptre

4A +2 D lens has focal length

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Answer and short explanation: 0.5 m

5Two lenses +3 D and −1 D in contact have power

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Answer and short explanation: +2 D

6The optic nerve exits at the

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Answer and short explanation: blind spot

JEE Advanced Questions

1Derive the corrective power for a myopic eye with far point x.

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Answer and short explanation: For an object at infinity, u=−∞ and the concave lens must produce v=−x. Thus 1/f=1/v−1/u=−1/x, so f=−x and P=−1/x.

2Derive the reading-glass power for a hypermetropic near point N′.

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Answer and short explanation: The object is at u=−D and its virtual image must be at v=−N′. Hence P=1/f=1/v−1/u=−1/N′+1/D.

3Why can a cylindrical lens correct regular astigmatism?

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Answer and short explanation: It supplies optical power in one meridian and zero along its axis, compensating the difference between the eye's principal meridional powers.

4A person has a prescription −2 DS/−1 DC ×180°. State principal powers.

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Answer and short explanation: Along axis 180°, cylinder contributes zero, so power is −2 D. In the 90° meridian, power is −2−1=−3 D.

5Explain why magnification is not the main goal of corrective spectacles.

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Answer and short explanation: Corrective lenses alter vergence so the eye can focus on the retina. Their purpose is focus correction, not angular enlargement.

6Why does a retinal image remain sharp while viewing objects at changing distances?

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Answer and short explanation: Ciliary muscles alter lens curvature, changing focal length while the lens-to-retina distance remains nearly fixed.

IB Physics Questions

1Explain how pupil reflex differs from accommodation.

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Answer and short explanation: Pupil reflex changes aperture and light level; accommodation changes lens curvature and optical power.

2Why is the cornea responsible for most refraction?

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Answer and short explanation: The largest refractive-index change occurs at the air-cornea interface.

IGCSE Questions

1Discuss one limitation of the reduced-eye model.

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Answer and short explanation: It combines several refracting surfaces into one equivalent system and omits detailed aberrations and gradient index.

2Why does dim light reduce fine detail?

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Answer and short explanation: Cone response and pupil diffraction/aberration conditions change; rod-dominated vision has lower spatial acuity.

ICSE Questions

1What is astigmatism?

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Answer and short explanation: Unequal curvature in different corneal or lens meridians causes different focal powers; a cylindrical lens corrects the deficient meridian.

2What is the blind spot?

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Answer and short explanation: The point where the optic nerve leaves the retina. It has no rods or cones and is insensitive to light.

3Why is the yellow spot important?

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Answer and short explanation: It contains a high density of cones and provides the sharpest colour vision.

British Curriculum Questions

1State the effect of a positive lens on incident vergence.

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Answer and short explanation: It increases vergence, making rays more convergent or less divergent.

2State the effect of a negative lens on incident vergence.

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Answer and short explanation: It decreases vergence, making rays more divergent or less convergent.

3Why are spectacle and contact-lens powers sometimes different?

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Answer and short explanation: Vertex distance changes effective vergence at the cornea, especially for high prescriptions.

4Explain why cataract is not corrected fully by changing spectacle power.

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Answer and short explanation: Scattering and opacity, not just focal error, reduce retinal image quality.

14. Assertion–Reason: 20 Questions

1Assertion–Reason

Assertion: The pupil appears black.

Reason: Most light entering it is absorbed inside the eye.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

2Assertion–Reason

Assertion: A myopic eye cannot see distant objects clearly.

Reason: Its far point is finite.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

3Assertion–Reason

Assertion: A concave lens corrects myopia.

Reason: It increases convergence of rays.

Show solution
Assertion true, Reason false; it decreases convergence.

4Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Hypermetropia uses a convex lens.

Reason: The lens forms a virtual image at the defective near point.

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Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

5Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Presbyopia is identical to hypermetropia.

Reason: Both always arise from a short eyeball.

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Both false; presbyopia is age-related accommodation loss.

6Assertion–Reason

Assertion: The retinal image is inverted.

Reason: The brain interprets visual signals to provide normal spatial perception.

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Both true, but Reason does not cause optical inversion.

7Assertion–Reason

Assertion: The blind spot has maximum cone density.

Reason: The optic nerve leaves the eye there.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true.

8Assertion–Reason

Assertion: The yellow spot gives sharp vision.

Reason: It has a high cone density.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

9Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Astigmatism can be corrected by a spherical lens alone in every case.

Reason: Astigmatism involves unequal powers in principal meridians.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true.

10Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Power in dioptres is reciprocal focal length in metres.

Reason: A short focal length means high power.

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Both true; Reason is consistent with the definition.

11Assertion–Reason

Assertion: A normal eye's far point is infinity.

Reason: Parallel rays are focused on the retina without accommodation.

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Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

12Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Accommodation increases lens focal length for a near object.

Reason: The lens becomes thicker.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true; thickness decreases focal length.

13Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Cataract is a refractive error corrected only with spectacles.

Reason: The crystalline lens becomes cloudy.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true.

14Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Colour blindness usually affects cone function.

Reason: Cones mediate colour vision.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

15Assertion–Reason

Assertion: A +2 D and −2 D lens in contact have zero equivalent power.

Reason: Thin-lens powers in contact add algebraically.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

16Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Myopia may result from an elongated eyeball.

Reason: The retina is then farther behind the eye lens.

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Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

17Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Hypermetropia may result from insufficient eye power.

Reason: Near-object rays then would focus behind the retina.

Show solution
Both true; Reason explains Assertion.

18Assertion–Reason

Assertion: A cylindrical lens has the same power in all meridians.

Reason: Its surface curvature is direction dependent.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true.

19Assertion–Reason

Assertion: The iris changes the focal length of the eye lens.

Reason: It changes pupil diameter.

Show solution
Assertion false, Reason true.

20Assertion–Reason

Assertion: Aqueous and vitreous humours help maintain eye shape and optical transmission.

Reason: They are transparent media.

Show solution
Both true; Reason partly explains Assertion.

15. Case Studies: 10 Sets

1Classroom board blur

A student sees a book clearly but the board is blurred. Far point is 2 m.

Tasks: Identify defect, lens type and power.

Show answer
Myopia; concave lens; P=−1/2=−0.5 D.

2Reading difficulty

A 45-year-old can read clearly only beyond 75 cm.

Tasks: Find addition for 25 cm and name the likely condition.

Show answer
P=4−1/0.75=+2.67 D; presbyopia or hypermetropic near-vision difficulty.

3Retinal focus

Parallel rays focus 2 mm before the retina.

Tasks: What defect is indicated and what optical action is needed?

Show answer
Myopia; reduce convergence with a concave lens.

4Behind-retina focus

Rays from a near object would meet behind the retina.

Tasks: Name defect and correction.

Show answer
Hypermetropia; convex lens increases incident convergence.

5Unequal line clarity

Vertical lines look sharp while horizontal lines blur.

Tasks: What defect and lens are likely?

Show answer
Regular astigmatism; cylindrical correction aligned to the appropriate axis.

6Cloudy vision

An elderly patient has progressively cloudy, glare-filled vision even with correct spectacles.

Tasks: Likely cause and treatment principle.

Show answer
Cataract; cloudy lens is commonly replaced surgically by an intraocular lens.

7Colour plates

A person cannot distinguish red-green numbers on an Ishihara plate.

Tasks: Which receptors are involved?

Show answer
Cone photopigments; commonly inherited red-green colour-vision deficiency.

8Bifocal design

A myopic presbyope needs −1 D for distance and +2 D reading addition.

Tasks: Find lower-segment net power.

Show answer
−1+2=+1 D.

9Lens combination

+3 D and −1 D thin lenses are placed in contact.

Tasks: Find total power and focal length.

Show answer
P=+2 D; f=0.50 m.

10Near-point experiment

A student moves print toward the eye until it first blurs at 20 cm.

Tasks: Interpret the result cautiously.

Show answer
Measured near point is about 20 cm under those conditions; lighting, print size and accommodation effort affect the result.

16. One-Page Revision Notes

Anatomy

  • Cornea: major fixed refraction
  • Iris/pupil: light control
  • Lens/ciliary muscles: accommodation
  • Retina: rods and cones
  • Fovea: sharp vision
  • Blind spot: no receptors

Defects

  • Myopia: focus before retina; concave lens
  • Hypermetropia: near focus behind retina; convex lens
  • Presbyopia: reduced accommodation
  • Astigmatism: unequal meridional power; cylinder

Exam tips

  • Use metres in P=1/f.
  • Virtual corrective image has v<0.
  • Myopia power is negative.
  • Hypermetropic reading addition is positive.
  • Cylinder power acts perpendicular to its axis.

Important diagram revision

Eye anatomyAccommodation: thin vs thick lensObject closer than 25 cmMyopia: focus before retinaConcave correctionHypermetropia: focus behind retinaConvex correctionPresbyopia and bifocalAstigmatism and cylinderCataractCone-cell defect
If any diagram, derivation or numerical is not clear, contact Kumar Sir for One-to-One Online Physics Classes.

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