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- We see things clearly when our eye is able to distinguish two objects (2 keys) or small details of an object (cricket ball & its seams).
- And our eye can distinguish these only till a distance, beyond which things become blurry.
- But the distance till which you can distinguish objects is not constant and it depends upon the size of the objects and the distance between the two.
- E.g. if two keys are 1 cm apart, you will be able to see them as two for a few metres; if they were 50 cm apart, you can distinguish them for a longer distance.
- The distance between two objects forms an angle for the human eye (Image A above).
- The farther things go from you, the smaller the angle for the human eye becomes (Image B).
- Nature has given a ‘limit’ (0.02 degrees) as to how small this angle can become before the human eye can’t see things clearly.
- From this limit, science tells us that at a distance of 1 km, someone with “normal distance vision” can see an object roughly between 30cm to 60cm in diameter (depending on light, air quality etc.).
- To check human eyesight a chart, Snellen chart (Image C), is used that displays letters of progressively smaller size.
- 20/20 vision means that the person being tested sees the same line of letters at 20 feet that person with “normal distance vision” sees at 20 feet.
- 20/40 vision would mean that the test subject sees at 20 feet what a person with normal vision sees at 40 feet.
- 20/20 is imperial measurement and 6/6 is metric measurement (6 metres = 19.68 feet); so both of them are used interchangeably.
- 20/20 just indicates sharpness & clarity of vision ‘at a distance’; there is plenty that an eye needs to achieve before it could be said to have perfect vision.
Image courtesy of Eye Picture by Free SVG