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#21
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"Mark Elkington" wrote in message
om... We left a party the other night and drove away up a hill. The moon was full and low on the horizon, viewable through the branches of trees and over the rooftops of houses at the top of the hill. It looked huge, as big as the distant trees and houses. As we drove toward the top of the hill, the moon shrank! By the time we reached the top, the moon was only the size a soccer ball in the branches of the now close trees. So there you have it. Closeness to the horizon was not the cause, but rather relative distances to terrestrial reference objects. However the moon illusion also works at sea with NO terrestrial references whatsoever. |
#22
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"John Steinberg" wrote in message
... But I recently had the eyeballs in for a tune-up and lube and I'm reasonably confident the corrective lenses are nicely dialed in. Although I still cannot locate an opthamologist to grant an after midnight appointment so as to get the best possible correction for astronomy use. One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). |
#23
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"John Steinberg" wrote in message
... But I recently had the eyeballs in for a tune-up and lube and I'm reasonably confident the corrective lenses are nicely dialed in. Although I still cannot locate an opthamologist to grant an after midnight appointment so as to get the best possible correction for astronomy use. One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). |
#24
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"John Steinberg" wrote in message
... Paul Lawler wrote: One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). That's interesting, I had no idea that could even be done. Do you need a *ginormous* exam room for that? Nope g... you just have to ask for them to be focused at infinity. It's especially helpful if you have astigmatism. |
#25
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"John Steinberg" wrote in message
... Paul Lawler wrote: One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). That's interesting, I had no idea that could even be done. Do you need a *ginormous* exam room for that? Nope g... you just have to ask for them to be focused at infinity. It's especially helpful if you have astigmatism. |
#26
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"Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net...
One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). Actually, there's good reason to think that astronomy glasses should be focused *beyond* infinity -- that is, they should be overcorrected (for myopic people). - Tony Flanders |
#27
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"Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net...
One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). Actually, there's good reason to think that astronomy glasses should be focused *beyond* infinity -- that is, they should be overcorrected (for myopic people). - Tony Flanders |
#28
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Tony Flanders wrote:
"Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net... One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). Actually, there's good reason to think that astronomy glasses should be focused *beyond* infinity -- that is, they should be overcorrected (for myopic people). For only occasional astronomical use, yes. But for regular daytime use, that's considered by most opticians that I've asked about, bad practice. The myopic eye has a tendency to become "lazy". Give it reason to relax its focusing system and it will stay there. In other words, overcorrect myopia and then you will eventually need an actual correction for the overcorrection. I did this when I was 16. One of my pairs was overcorrected. Soon it was insufficient, and I had to replace it. There is a good chance the increase came as a result of my myopia not having been stabilized yet, but nevertheless I remember having properly adjusted at some point to the overcorrection and then feeling "blinder" when I took my glasses off. The best strategy is to correct *exactly* for what you've got, which is somewhat subjective, anyway, since the ophthalmologist relies on your responses to determine what you see and what not and since myopia often does not stabilize before the entire skull stops growing. A good way to "cheat" a bit on the exam is to claim that you don't see some of the smaller letters until the doc provides you with a lens that will allow you to see slightly more clearly. For those of us with astigmatism, things are even worse: I've spent one hour with my o-doc trying to eliminate side ghosts from the image I was viewing. The results are good for telescope and binocular usage and for relatively dim objects, but I still see ghosts around the moon and around bright nighttime objects when my pupils dilate. It appears that astigmatism can be corrected only under the additional assumption that the iris is not fully dilated. When it is, some astigmatism persists, regardless of correction. - Tony Flanders -- I. N. Galidakis http://users.forthnet.gr/ath/jgal/ ------------------------------------------ Eventually, _everything_ is understandable |
#29
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Tony Flanders wrote:
"Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net... One thing is to get your doctor to prescribe a pair of "astronomy glasses." The difference between these and your regular prescription is that these are focused at infinity (instead of some closer point as is done normally). Actually, there's good reason to think that astronomy glasses should be focused *beyond* infinity -- that is, they should be overcorrected (for myopic people). For only occasional astronomical use, yes. But for regular daytime use, that's considered by most opticians that I've asked about, bad practice. The myopic eye has a tendency to become "lazy". Give it reason to relax its focusing system and it will stay there. In other words, overcorrect myopia and then you will eventually need an actual correction for the overcorrection. I did this when I was 16. One of my pairs was overcorrected. Soon it was insufficient, and I had to replace it. There is a good chance the increase came as a result of my myopia not having been stabilized yet, but nevertheless I remember having properly adjusted at some point to the overcorrection and then feeling "blinder" when I took my glasses off. The best strategy is to correct *exactly* for what you've got, which is somewhat subjective, anyway, since the ophthalmologist relies on your responses to determine what you see and what not and since myopia often does not stabilize before the entire skull stops growing. A good way to "cheat" a bit on the exam is to claim that you don't see some of the smaller letters until the doc provides you with a lens that will allow you to see slightly more clearly. For those of us with astigmatism, things are even worse: I've spent one hour with my o-doc trying to eliminate side ghosts from the image I was viewing. The results are good for telescope and binocular usage and for relatively dim objects, but I still see ghosts around the moon and around bright nighttime objects when my pupils dilate. It appears that astigmatism can be corrected only under the additional assumption that the iris is not fully dilated. When it is, some astigmatism persists, regardless of correction. - Tony Flanders -- I. N. Galidakis http://users.forthnet.gr/ath/jgal/ ------------------------------------------ Eventually, _everything_ is understandable |
#30
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On Fri, 09 Jul 2004 00:37:37 -0400, starman wrote:
Mike Ruskai wrote: The illusion is alive and well when out on the ocean, with no terrestrial objects anywhere in sight. That would seem to imply that there is a connection with our equilibrium, which tells the brain whether our head is level with the horizon or tilted upward. Perhaps a convincing planetarium projection on the ceiling, viewed while lying down, could provide support (or not) for that theory. -- - Mike Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail. |
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