Reindeer are the only mammal known to seasonally adapt their eyes to the extremely blue colour of the extended twilight that occupies a large part of the winter 24 h cycle in their Arctic habitat. We describe the atmospheric phenomenon that results in this extreme spectral change in light environment. Reflectance spectroscopy is used to characterize the photonic nanostructure that generates the reflective region of the tapetum lucidum behind the retina.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlue light (~400-470 nm) is considered potentially detrimental to the retina but is present in natural environmental light. Mitochondrial density is highest in the retina, and they exhibit a prominent optical absorption around 420 nm arising from the Soret band of their porphyrins, including in cytochrome-c-oxidase in their respiratory chain. We examine the impact of continuous 420 nm at environmental energy levels on retinal mitochondrial metabolism and haemodynamics in vivo in real time using broadband near-infrared spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIncreased blue light exposure has become a matter of concern as it has a range of detrimental effects, but the mechanisms remain unclear. Mitochondria absorb short wavelength light but have a specific absorbance at 420nm at the lower end of the human visual range. This 420nm absorption is probably due to the presence of porphyrin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoreceptors have high energy demands and densely packed mitochondria through which light passes before phototransduction. Old world primates including humans have three cone photoreceptor types mediating color vision with short (S blue), medium (M green), and long (L red) wavelength sensitivities. However, S-cones are enigmatic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
April 2014
We present a new analysis of Robert Grosseteste's account of color in his treatise De iride (On the Rainbow), dating from the early 13th century. The work explores color within the 3D framework set out in Grosseteste's De colore [see J. Opt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe capacity for cone-mediated color vision varies among nocturnal primates. Some species are colorblind, having lost the functionality of their short-wavelength-sensitive-1 (SWS1) opsin pigment gene. In other species, such as the aye-aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis), the SWS1 gene remains intact.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo investigate primate color objectively, it is critical to employ tools that yield reliable measures of color samples. Primatologists have traditionally depended on color assessment methods that lack accuracy, precision, and replicability. In this work, we introduce the "red, green, and blue" (RGB) method, a technique combining digital video cameras and Adobe PhotoShop, as a means to assess and graphically represent primate color objectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUNIFIED models of radio-loud quasars and powerful radio galaxies suggest that they are intrinsically similar objects observed from different angles. This can be tested by comparing the isotropically emitted radiation from the spatially extended nebulae surrounding the nuclei; the unified models predict that the intensities of these emissions should be comparable for the two classes of object. But when this prediction was examined for the [O ] 5,007-Å emission line, it was found that quasar [O ] luminosities significantly exceed those of otherwise similar radio galaxies.
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