Seeing without glasses...
Lost your contact lenses? Crushed your glasses? Well you need stare
at blurry public transport signs no longer, as simple physics can be
exploited to give your vision a small boost using just your hand.

Pinholes can focus light in a similar way to a lens |
The 'trick' was posted in YouTube video form and has been stunning
bespectacled users in the hours following. It's very simple:
Make a tiny hole with your finger (curling up index finger works
best) and look through it.
Whatever you're viewing, be it text, object or vista should appear
considerably clearer. It is hardly a replacement for corrective optical
devices but a pleasing 20-second time waster all the same.
"I am very near-sighted, and I could read the text on my book across
the room. Incredible!" one commented.
"It works! That's incredible! I'm actually stunned right now, this is
great." said another.
There's a full explanation of how the trick works in the video, but
here's the TL;DR:Your eyes' lenses focus spread out light to create a
crisp image on your retina (unless they're damaged, causing you to need
glasses), with eye muscles squeezing them so we can focus at different
distances. Unlike a lens, a pinhole or other small opening can focus
light coming from any distance.
Because it's such a small opening, it only allows light to come
through in one place, and thus in only one direction from any particular
source, so there's no blur, and everything is in focus.
Small holes create crisp images by blocking rather than focusing
light though, so the images are much darker, which is one reason why we
don't use them for glasses, contact lenses, telescopes etc.
- The Independent |