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Switchable lenses improve vision.


Some people have the impression that wearing eyeglasses eyeglasses or spectacles, instrument or device for aiding and correcting defective sight. Eyeglasses usually consist of a pair of lenses mounted in a frame to hold them in position before the eyes.  can make you look smarter. Someday some·day  
adv.
At an indefinite time in the future.

Usage Note: The adverbs someday and sometime express future time indefinitely: We'll succeed someday. Come sometime.
, your glasses themselves might actually be smarter.

Scientists are developing "smart" lenses that sense where your eyes are looking and automatically focus to help you see more clearly.

The main market for the glasses is adults older than 45-perhaps your parents or grandparents grandparents nplabuelos mpl

grandparents grand nplgrands-parents mpl

grandparents grand npl
. At this point in life, most people start to get worse at seeing things Seeing Things may refer to:
  • Hallucinations where someone sees things that are not actually present
  • Seeing Things (poetry), a collection of poems published by Seamus Heaney in 1991.
  • Seeing Things (TV series), a Canadian television series which aired in the 1980s.
 that are close to them, such as books and computer screens.

When the decline begins, people usually start wearing reading glasses. Or, they get bifocals bifocals /bi·fo·cals/ (bi´fo-k'lz) bifocal glasses. , which have divided lenses-a top part for seeing far and a bottom part for seeing near. Some kids with vision problems have to wear such glasses, too.

University researchers are working with a company called PixelOptics, in Roanoke, Va., to replace bifocals with electric lenses that can switch quickly from one type of focus to another.

"You don't have just the bottom half of your eyeglasses" for close vision, says electrical engineer David L. Mathine of the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  in Tucson. He's one of the inventors. "You get the whole view," he says.

Each lens is made from two layers, and each layer is made up of two sheets of glass, with a thin layer of fluid sandwiched between the sheets. The fluid contains a transparent type of material called a liquid crystal, which is made of molecules that are shaped like rods. To change a lens' focus, scientists apply electricity to the inner surface of one of the glass sheets in each layer.

In response to the electricity, the crystal rods rotate. Their direction determines how quickly light passes through the liquid-crystal layer. The process allows the material to focus light so that a crisp image forms inside the viewer's eyes.

Scientists had made similar, electrically controlled lenses before, but these earlier lenses couldn't focus well enough or change focus quickly enough to be useful in eyeglasses, the inventors say. PixelOptics has announced that it also plans to make a version of the glasses that will help people achieve extrasharp vision-even better than normal 20/20 eyesight eye·sight
n.
1. The faculty of sight; vision.

2. Range of vision; view.
.-E. Sohn

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20060426/Note3.asp From Science News for Kids April 26, 2006. Copyright (c) 2006 Science Service. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 26, 2006
Words:381
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