Question - Understanding Human Vision and Photons

Solution:

Humans cannot see individual photons directly. Vision is a result of photoreceptor cells in our eyes responding to photons. When photons enter the eye, they are absorbed by photoreceptor cells in the retina. These cells then send electrical signals to the brain, which interprets them as visual images. However, our photoreceptors require a certain number of photons to trigger a response that leads to perception.Individual photons, due to their extremely small energy (depending on their wavelength), are not enough to trigger a visual response on their own. However, under very controlled laboratory conditions, studies have found that the human eye might be capable of detecting a few photons, though this is a threshold and not a typical everyday situation. Moreover, this detection does not constitute "seeing" in the traditional sense as we wouldn't be able to resolve an image. Therefore, for all practical purposes, we do not see individual photons but rather detect light as a stream of many photons.

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