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Anecdotes_05 ' In the dark '

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jason udall15/02/2014 15:36:25
2032 forum posts
41 photos
Astronauts have reported what amounts to cloud chamber effects happening in the eye. Due to the passage of cosmic rays through the eye.
The human eye can under the correct conditions "detect" single photons..though obviously more would be required to form any kind of image
Another JohnS15/02/2014 16:37:27
842 forum posts
56 photos

Interesting - have not been in a coal mine, but have been in the middle of Ontario many times on an overcast night.

Your peripheral vision works differently than straight forward vision - according to a colleague who has a PhD in this stuff - and I think he's right. If you want to see something when it's near pitch dark, don't look where you think it is, but let your peripheral vision find it (if it can).

I don't propose to understand why, but vision is an interesting gift we've been given.

Thanks for the anecdote; JohnS.

fizzy15/02/2014 17:11:53
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1860 forum posts
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There are two types of receptor cells in the eye, namely rods and cones, if memory serves me cones detect colour while rods detect grey shade. The colour receptors are most used and so are focused in the back of the eye, but these are not good in low light, thus in order to maximise the potential to see better one has to position the eye so that the availible light is concentrated on the rods, which is why at this point looking straight at the object in question is not effective....its been a long time so forgive me if this is a bit off, but the principal is correct!

Bazyle15/02/2014 17:58:55
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6956 forum posts
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I believe a large number of materials electrofluoresce under stress eg being squashed underground and in reverse as mining changes the sress distribution. Also many bacteria, as on human skin, do the same. Meanwhile the optic nerves and brain trigger false lights like crazy when you just close your eyes.

Edited By Bazyle on 15/02/2014 17:59:57

Roderick Jenkins15/02/2014 18:30:40
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2376 forum posts
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Posted by fizzy on 15/02/2014 17:11:53:

There are two types of receptor cells in the eye, namely rods and cones, if memory serves me cones detect colour while rods detect grey shade. The colour receptors are most used and so are focused in the back of the eye, but these are not good in low light, thus in order to maximise the potential to see better one has to position the eye so that the availible light is concentrated on the rods, which is why at this point looking straight at the object in question is not effective....its been a long time so forgive me if this is a bit off, but the principal is correct!

Bang on Fizzy. In the astronomy world it's called "averted vision". It really works, once you've learnt the trick of not quite looking in the centre of the eyepiece.

Rod

Ian S C16/02/2014 10:08:47
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7468 forum posts
230 photos

Could it be piezo-electric discharges caused by extreme pressure on the likes of quartz rock? Ian S C

OuBallie16/02/2014 10:15:46
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1181 forum posts
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Peripheral vision = attack awareness.

I remember reading that this is our inbuilt ability of being aware, albeit unconsciously, of any potential danger around us.

I use this ability regularly at night, not just on my frequent trots.

Geoff - Well I am an ouballie.

KWIL16/02/2014 10:35:04
3681 forum posts
70 photos

Peripheral vision is important when you are driving, that is the bit that you steer by, forward vision sets the course but the accuracy of missing things is a lot closer!

norman valentine16/02/2014 11:52:24
280 forum posts
40 photos

I was a teacher before I retired. Good peripheral vision was very useful in a workshop environment when I was able to catch many misbehaving pupils who thought that I couldn't see them.

Norman

jason udall16/02/2014 12:49:04
2032 forum posts
41 photos
There is a phenomenon. .called triboluminescence..basically direct stress to light from materials. . ( duct tape does it)...it would be facinating to think that rocks in mines emit light possibly indicating stress in the mine walls...

Gordon W16/02/2014 16:43:15
2011 forum posts

When I was young I did a bit of caving/potholing and have many times experienced total darkness. It does not matter how long you sit, there will be no real light. Quite common to start seeing lights tho', never did manage to work out what was real and what not. Some are the usual flashes that everyone gets ,are these real ? If they are nerve endings setting off or similar isn't that the same as seeing light. Was told that olden days miners worked by the light given off by rotting fish, never tried it tho'. A bit more worrying is the noises heard deep down, are they real , or just the body noises not usually noticed ? Of course light cannot be seen, only when it hits something.

Billy Mills16/02/2014 17:49:39
377 forum posts

Interesting that MW remembers very low level colours. Cones come in three colour sensitivities, Red Green and Blue and are clustered together, they don't work at all at low light. There are roughly 20 times as many rods which do go down to single photons when very well adapted. So for normal humans as light level drops we see less colour, red tends to dim first, the peak sensitivity at green- blue gives way to grey at around 100 times min detection level. At very low light levels we cannot see colour at all, you need a telescope or binoculars to see the colour of stars.

Broadcast Colour TV has taken advantage of these properties for years, We have only ever watched black and white pictures with the coarse detail coloured at lower bandwidth, matches out eyes!

There is a third type of photo receptor - not many people know about so handy for the pub quiz- photosensitive ganglion cells which respond to high general illumination.

Billy.

Rik Shaw16/02/2014 20:27:28
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1494 forum posts
403 photos

Potholing? A very good friend of mine used to go caving when he was younger. He used to like to tell the story of how after a session down a pothole (I think it was Gaping Gill but memory is not so good these days) each potholer in the group was hauled to the surface by a windlass while seated in a chair like contraption. Only one person at a time could make the trip and on this occasion my friend had drawn the short straw and was the last to be pulled up.

As the last but one person was lifted off from what was a vast underground cavern, my friends helmet light flickered several times and finally went out. He was left sitting in the profound darkness of an underground chamber but was relaxed in the knowledge that the "chair" would return to lift him out -eventually.

He painted a word picture of himself sitting in the blackness with the sound of falling water echoing from the walls of the cavern, the occasional clatter of falling stone and a profound sense of being alone. He would explain at this point that in a situation like this your life is entirely in the hands of "them up top".

He goes on " As I sat there, I fancied I could see - now and again - a faint light flickering in my peripheral vision but when I turned to look in the direction of the light it disappeared." Gradually though, the light becomes stronger and it seemed to be coming nearer flickering as a candle would. This cannot be possible my friend explains, I was the only person in that pothole so who was carrying that light?

My friend is not the sort of person to be intimidated, he is a down to earth scientist - a mathematician expert in aerodynamics and probably the UK's leading expert on the Russian ekranoplan, a devout atheist and scoffer of the paranormal yet he admits that as the light gets ever closer the hairs on the back of his neck begin to stand.

With a clatter the rescue "chair" arrives and in the dark he straps himself in, yanks the rope to signal "lift" and begins his ascent. On his way up he looks down and sees the flame stationary where he had previously been sitting.

He looks around us goggled eyed lot over our pints at our table in The Black Horse and remarks "I was a little relieved", and we believed him!

Rik

YAK16/02/2014 20:46:47
58 forum posts
2 photos

I remember Youth Hosteling in Derbyshire, with my School in the late 50's. We went down the Blue John Mine and while down there the lights were turned off to show us total darkness. It was an experience I will not forget.

Terry

Billy Mills16/02/2014 21:17:30
377 forum posts

There was a program on Discovery about a year ago using marine very low light imaging. They had some state of the art cameras working in a very dark night at sea. The wake from the boat glowed brightly, a kind of phosphorescence from bacteria in the sea when hit by the pressure wave. Almost everything glowed underwater, many creatures were light producing -when they wanted to be.

At very great sea depths it is always thought of as being very dark, most creatures at these levels ( and cave dwellers) are not pigmented or marked. Many are blind. There is the most extraordinary creature of the deep , the Giant Squid which has by far the largest eye knowen at around 12" diameter. That eye would not have evolved if the Squid did not gain an advantage from it's low light performance.

Our eyes are relativly insensitive and slow to adapt, it can take up to 30 mins - dependant on life style and health- for the human eye to reach maximum sensitivity, older eyes tend to have smaller fully open apertures too. We also tend to avoid extreem dark wherever possible, we have developed to avoid situations where we are at a great disadvantage to other preditors which is a pretty good idea! So we may well lack detailed knowledge of common low light events , let alone the unusual ones.

As a wiser man than me said " It's only the hole in the ear that lets in the fear, that and the absence of light"

Billy

Ian P16/02/2014 22:03:23
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2747 forum posts
123 photos
Posted by OuBallie on 16/02/2014 10:15:46:

Peripheral vision = attack awareness.

I remember reading that this is our inbuilt ability of being aware, albeit unconsciously, of any potential danger around us.

I use this ability regularly at night, not just on my frequent trots.

Geoff - Well I am an ouballie.

Geoff

I've got to ask, 'ouballie' Is that a religion, way of life, nickname or what?

Ian P

Martin Cottrell16/02/2014 23:00:26
297 forum posts
18 photos
Posted by Ian Phillips on 16/02/2014 22:03:23:
Posted by OuBallie on 16/02/2014 10:15:46:

Peripheral vision = attack awareness.

I remember reading that this is our inbuilt ability of being aware, albeit unconsciously, of any potential danger around us.

I use this ability regularly at night, not just on my frequent trots.

Geoff - Well I am an ouballie.

Geoff

I've got to ask, 'ouballie' Is that a religion, way of life, nickname or what?

Ian P

I too am intrigued Ian, maybe Geoff has " seen the light" ??!!

Martin.

Ian S C17/02/2014 11:11:25
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7468 forum posts
230 photos

Michael, you mention radio activity, while in England the last time(1984) I stayed with an uncle who was CEO of British Nuclear Fuels, and among other things we talked of, he was saying that they had been testing coal fired power stations for radiation, and were shocked at the high level of radiation in the coal, far above that allowed in the atomic power stations of the time. So radiation could be quite high in a coal mine.

He also mentioned how one power station had a bit of an emergency, a group tour went through the station, and on exiting everyone gets scanned, and one woman went "off the clock", it was found that the jewellery she was wearing was "hot", it was an antique broach, with lapis lazuli stones, and these were the source of the radiation. So its around us even when we least expect it. Ian S C

jason udall17/02/2014 12:16:45
2032 forum posts
41 photos
Bananas

.and Brazil nuts.

jason udall17/02/2014 12:28:48
2032 forum posts
41 photos
Many years( or atleast pre 1980)
In eprom memory chips an unexpectedly high data corruption rate was noticed. ..to track this down a batch of wafers was bonded out ( wired using very thin gold wires) for test purposes....batch A some other wafers were processed normally. .split up to be later..encased ..bonded out

Then this batch was was split in two futher groups one encased as normal in ceramic with little quartz window..and the rest encased in expoxy as most silicon chips are...
The in effect same chips were tested. .uncased..ok
Plastic case ok...
Ceramic...failing


It was all traced to radio active minerals in the clay of the ceramic...
.
Its every where. .

Edited By jason udall on 17/02/2014 12:30:01

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