Clinical Services   Department of Ophthalmology  
75th Anniversary - Celebration of site Stanley Chang

Dr. Stanley Chang Receives Castle Connolly “Physician of the Year” Award

Read more
Stephen Trokel

Dr. Stephen Trokel elected to The American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery Hall of Fame

Read more Columbia Ophthalmology Consultants

Nurses at Harkness Institute win highest awards from Press Ganey for third year in a row.

Read more Gloria and Louis Flanzer Vision Care Center

The Department of Ophthalmology at Columbia University Medical Center is proud to announce the opening of The Gloria and Louis Flanzer Vision Care Center.

Read more
Print This Page
Decrease Font Size Increase Font Size

About the Eye

Eye Works: The Human Eye

Eye ChartThe human eye gives us more information about the outside world than any other sensory organ, producing continuous images that are instantly transmitted to the brain for processing. Not only is the eye a personal window on the world, but it offers a noninvasive and immediate view into the body's vascular system, providing physicians with an opportunity for early diagnosis of hypertension and diabetes.

In an adult, the eye has a diameter of approximately 25mm (or one inch). It sits in a cavity in the skull called the eye's orbit. The one sixth of the eye's surface that is exposed beyond the orbit is protected against strong light and foreign objects by the eyelids, eyelashes, and eyebrows.

The outermost layer of the eyeball is the visible white of the eye, the sclera, which provides structure and strength; it is covered by a thin membrane called the conjunctiva. The clear substance located inside the sclera is called the vitreous, a gel-like material that gives the eye its spherical shape. In front of the sclera is the transparent, protective cornea, which provides most of the focusing power for light entering the eye. The cornea's outermost layer of tissue contains cells that have the ability to regenerate within three days, allowing for rapid healing of superficial injuries. From the cornea, light passes through the pupil, the dark circle centered in the iris, the blue, green, brown or hazel ring of color that helps describe a person's appearance. The eye's iris also functions like the iris of a camera, opening and closing to regulate the pupil's size, which controls how much light penetrates the eye, by becoming smaller under bright conditions, or expanding in a dim environment.

Behind the iris, the lens provides fine-tuning for focusing and reading by altering its shape. The lens directs light onto the fine nerve tissue of the retina, which lines the inside wall of the eye and acts like the film in a camera. The retina converts the light into images and then into electrical impulses that are sent along the optic nerve to the brain. Within the brain, these signals undergo processing by the visual cortex, which senses and interprets them as the shapes and colors that the eye ?sees.?