Ocular straylight

Ocular straylight is a phenomenon where parts of the eye are able to scatter light, creating glare. It is analogous to stray light in other optical systems; scattered light reaches the retina, but does not contribute to forming a correct image.

One can observe the effect of straylight by looking at a distant bright light source against a dark background. If the source is small, it would look like a small bright spot if the eye imaged it perfectly. Scattering in the eye makes the source appear spread out, surrounded by glare. The disability glare caused by such a situation has been found to correspond precisely to the effect of true light.[1][clarification needed] As a consequence, disability glare was subsequently defined by this true light, called "straylight".[1][clarification needed]

  1. ^ a b Vos JJ. "Disability glare - a state of the art report". Commission International de l'Eclairage Journal. 1984;3/2:39-53