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Human Body Glitches
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Human Body

Your eyes can actually see single photons

The most sensitive instrument you'll ever own.

By Smartasaurus
Your eyes can actually see single photons
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Dim the lights, then dim them again, until the room is steeped in profound twilight. As your eyes adjust to the deepening gloom, try to discern a faint, brief flash of light. At the edge of human perception, against a canvas of near-absolute darkness, your very own photoreceptors are detecting the most fundamental packet of light: a single photon.

For decades, the prevailing scientific consensus positioned the human eye as an instrument too crude to register single light particles. Our biological detectors, bathed in internal noise from metabolic processes, seemed ill-equipped for such minute discrimination. Yet, recent elegant experiments have demonstrated that rods in the human retina can indeed fire in response to a singular photon. This sensitivity pushes the boundaries of our understanding of biological sensory systems.

This detection isn't a conscious, visual experience like seeing a star; rather, it’s a statistical event. When multiple rods fire due to single-photon absorption, the brain constructs a perceived flash. The mechanism involves rhodopsin molecules within the rods, which undergo a conformational change after absorbing just one photon. This tiny molecular event then cascades into an electrical signal.

More from Human Body
The 60,000 Mile Highway Inside Your Body

The human visual system, a marvel of biological engineering, possesses an inherent quantum sensitivity. It suggests that our sensory organs operate with a precision that borders on the physically possible. This deepens our appreciation for the intricate design of the eye, capable of drawing information from the most elemental units of reality.

A photon has no mass.

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