There is no logical answer, no mathematical equation that can answer.In the view of the human eye there is 1.
A cone bearer is a cone that bears
Neither. A cone is a cone.
Yes, a cone has an apex. To be precise, it is the point at the tip of the cone. This is also called the vertex of the cone.
Yes a cone does
You have rod cells and cone cells as receptors in your eye. Rods are for intensity of the light. Cone cells are for color vision.
The eye .In there eye there is rod cells and cone cells. Rod cells detect color and Cone cells detect black and white. The cone cells let you see in the dark.
cone cells
because some animals don't have a CONE in on their eye.
rod and cone cells
Cone cells, or cones, are photoreceptor cells in the retina of the eye which function best in relatively bright light. The cone cells gradually become sparser towards the periphery of the retina.
The cones in your eye are responsible for helping you to see color. They are in the retina and operate only in light. The rods are the other receptors.
The cones in your eye are responsible for helping you to see color. They are in the retina and operate only in light. The rods are the other receptors.
Cone cells are a type of photoreceptor cell in the retina of the eye that are responsible for color vision and high visual acuity. Each cone cell contains different pigments that respond to different wavelengths of light. Therefore, not all eye cells are cone cells, as the retina also contains rod cells, another type of photoreceptor cell that is more sensitive to low light levels and is responsible for night vision.
The cone cells in the human eye are responsible for colour vision and come in 3 types, each sensitive to either Red, Green or Blue light. The brain then uses the information from these to generate our view of the complete visible spectrum.
Yes a cone cell does have nucleus because all cells have nucleus
It is a point on the eye where acute vision is possible due to concentration of cone cells in the region