What are those floaty things in your eye Michael Mauser

Have you ever noticed something swimming
in your field of vision?

It may look like a tiny worm
or a transparent blob,

and whenever you try to get
a closer look, it disappears,

only to reappear
as soon as you shift your glance.

But don’t go rinsing out your eyes!

What you are seeing is a common phenomenon

known as a floater.

The scientific name for these objects
is Muscae volitantes,

Latin for “flying flies,”

and true to their name,
they can be somewhat annoying.

But they’re not actually bugs
or any kind of external objects at all.

Rather, they exist inside your eyeball.

Floaters may seem to be alive,
since they move and change shape,

but they are not alive.

Floaters are tiny objects
that cast shadows on the retina,

the light-sensitive tissue
at the back of your eye.

They might be bits of tissue,

red blood cells,

or clumps of protein.

And because they’re suspended
within the vitreous humor,

the gel-like liquid
that fills the inside of your eye,

floaters drift along
with your eye movements,

and seem to bounce a little
when your eye stops.

Floaters may be only
barely distinguishable most of the time.

They become more visible
the closer they are to the retina,

just as holding your hand closer
to a table with an overhead light

will result in a more
sharply defined shadow.

And floaters are particularly noticeable

when you are looking
at a uniform bright surface,

like a blank computer screen,

snow,

or a clear sky,

where the consistency of the background
makes them easier to distinguish.

The brighter the light is,
the more your pupil contracts.

This has an effect similar
to replacing a large diffuse light fixture

with a single overhead light bulb,

which also makes
the shadow appear clearer.

There is another visual phenomenon
that looks similar to floaters

but is in fact unrelated.

If you’ve seen tiny dots of light
darting about

when looking at a bright blue sky,

you’ve experienced what is known
as the blue field entoptic phenomenon.

In some ways,
this is the opposite of seeing floaters.

Here, you are not seeing shadows

but little moving windows
letting light through to your retina.

The windows are actually caused
by white blood cells

moving through the capillaries
along your retina’s surface.

These leukocytes can be so large
that they nearly fill a capillary

causing a plasma space
to open up in front of them.

Because the space
and the white blood cells

are both more transparent to blue light

than the red blood cells
normally present in capillaries,

we see a moving dot of light
wherever this happens,

following the paths of your capillaries
and moving in time with your pulse.

Under ideal viewing conditions,

you might even see what looks
like a dark tail following the dot.

This is the red blood cells
that have bunched up behind the leukocyte.

Some science museums have an exhibit
which consists of a screen of blue light,

allowing you to see these blue sky sprites
much more clearly than you normally would.

While everybody’s eyes experience
these sort of effects,

the number and type vary greatly.

In the case of floaters,

they often go unnoticed,
as our brain learns to ignore them.

However, abnormally numerous

or large floaters
that interfere with vision

may be a sign of a more serious condition,
requiring immediate medical treatment.

But the majority of the time
entoptic phenomena,

such as floaters and blue sky sprites,

are just a gentle reminder
that what we think we see

depends just as much
on our biology and minds

as it does on the external world.

你有没有注意到有什么东西
在你的视野里游来游去?

它可能看起来像一条小虫子
或透明的一团

,当你
试图仔细观察时,它就会消失,

只有在
你移开视线时才会重新出现。

但是不要去冲洗你的眼睛!

您所看到的是一种常见的现象,

称为漂浮物。

这些物体的学名
是 Muscae volitantes,

拉丁语是“飞蝇”的意思

,正如它们的名字一样,
它们可能有点烦人。

但它们实际上根本不是错误
或任何类型的外部对象。

相反,它们存在于你的眼球内。

漂浮物似乎是活的,
因为它们会移动并改变形状,

但它们并不是活的。

飞蚊症是
在视网膜上投下阴影的微小物体,视网膜

是眼睛后部的感光组织。

它们可能是组织碎片、

红细胞

或蛋白质块。

而且因为它们悬浮
在玻璃体液中,

这种凝胶状
液体充满了你的眼睛内部,

漂浮物会
随着你的眼球运动

而漂移,当你的眼睛停止转动时,它们似乎会反弹一点

大多数时候,漂浮物可能几乎无法区分。

它们越靠近视网膜就越明显,

就像将手
靠近带有顶灯的桌子

会产生更
清晰的阴影一样。

当您
看到均匀明亮的表面时,

例如空白的电脑屏幕、

或晴朗的天空,漂浮物特别明显

,背景的一致性
使它们更容易区分。

光线越亮
,你的瞳孔收缩得越多。

这具有类似于
用单个头顶灯泡替换大型漫射灯具的效果

这也
使阴影看起来更清晰。

还有另一种视觉现象
看起来与飞蚊症相似,

但实际上并不相关。

如果您在观看

明亮的蓝天时看到微小的光点飞来飞去,

那么您就经历了所谓
的蓝场内视现象。

在某些方面,
这与看到漂浮物相反。

在这里,您看到的不是阴影,

而是
让光线进入视网膜的小移动窗口。

窗户实际上是
由沿着视网膜表面

的毛细血管移动的白细胞引起
的。

这些白细胞可能非常大
,以至于它们几乎充满了毛细血管,

导致血浆空间
在它们面前打开。

因为空间
和白细胞

都比毛细血管中通常存在的红细胞对蓝光更透明,

所以无论发生这种情况

我们都会看到一个移动的光点

沿着毛细血管的路径
并随着你的脉搏移动。

在理想的观看条件下,

您甚至可能会看到一个看起来
像黑尾的东西。

这是
聚集在白细胞后面的红细胞。

一些科学博物馆有
一个由蓝光屏幕组成的展览,

让您可以比平时更清楚地看到这些蓝天精灵

虽然每个人的眼睛都会体验到
这种效果

,但数量和类型差异很大。

在漂浮物的情况下,

它们经常被忽视,
因为我们的大脑学会了忽略它们。

然而,影响视力的异常数量

或大的飞蚊症

可能是病情更严重的征兆,
需要立即就医。

但大多数时候,内
视现象,

例如漂浮物和蓝天精灵,

只是一个温和的提醒
,我们认为我们看到的

东西
在很大程度上取决于我们的生物学和思想,

就像它对外部世界的影响一样。