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me people, especially if they are young and haven't spent too much time listening to loud music can hear sounds that are normally considered "ultrasonic".
young
Naked eye! ... i just want to know why?
QuoteNaked eye! ... i just want to know why?The human eye has 3 color-sensing cones: roughly red, green and blue (some color-blind people can see only 2 colors directly).But within these, there is genetic variation - there are two common variants of the red gene that have different spectral responses, allowing some women to see 4 colors directly.It is possible that you have a genetic variant that has slightly better response into the longer wavelengths, or near-infra-red.- These infra-red photons carry low energy, so it is hard for infra-red photons to activate chemical pathways- Without these sensitive pathways being activated all the time by normal body temperature...You could test this by getting a prism to split light into a rainbow. - Get another person to mark on a piece of paper the limits of visible light they can see, from red to violet.- Then you mark the paper with the colors you can see, from red to violet- See how much they overlap. The Sun produces quite a lot of light at infra-red, and glass is somewhat transparent to near-infra-red.- For a better test, use a diffraction grating, but they tend to be harder to obtain than a prism.
Hi. Seeing infrared is unusual. We might expect a little variation among human beings for most things we can sense that involve some mechanical process of detection. For example, hearing sounds into the ultrasonic range. It's a little bit stranger for eye sight because a lot of it boils down the ability of a particular molecule to absorb a photon. This is not a mechanical process. If you had some genetic variation that made your photosensitive molecules different to most other people, this would probably make you blind to certain colours. It's likely that even a small change in those pigments would stop them from working at all, rather than making them favour slightly longer wavelenegths. I found this article on the internet: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXI don't know how reliable it is. Their findings were apparently published in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)". It suggests that, in some cases, the standard pigments in the retian can absorb two low frequency photons in short succession and this can trigger the usual chemical changes in the pigment and cause a signal to be sent along the optic nerve. This usually requires the infrared source to be "pulsed" (rapidly turned on and off) which might be exactly what your IR remote control is doing. Anyway, they used a laser which produced IR radiation and this is what they said: .... packing a lot of photons in a short pulse of the rapidly pulsing laser light makes it possible for two photons to be absorbed at one time by a single photopigment, and the combined energy of the two light particles is enough to activate the pigment and allow the eye to see what normally is invisible. It could be that your eyes (the lens, the cornea, the vitreous humor etc.) don't absorb or filter out as much IR radiation as most other people. So other people don't generally experience two IR photons hitting the photopigments in the retina in rapid succession - but you do.Best Wishes.
some women to see 4 colors directly...btw am a man..And I am not a color blind person