prismatic binocular - translation to greek
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prismatic binocular - translation to greek

TYPE OF VISION IN WHICH AN ANIMAL HAVING TWO EYES IS ABLE TO PERCEIVE A SINGLE THREE-DIMENSIONAL IMAGE OF ITS SURROUNDINGS
Binocular movement; Binocularity; Vision, binocular; Allelotropia; Single binocular vision; Binocular single vision; Binocular fusion; Utrocular discrimination
  • Principle of binocular vision with [[horopter]] shown
  • The field of view of a pigeon compared to that of an owl.
  • The [[grey crowned crane]], an animal that has laterally-placed eyes which can also face forward.

prismatic binocular      
πρισματική δίοπτρα
πρισματική δίοπτρα      
prismatic binocular
field glass         
  • left
  • Porro type, external eyepiece bridge central-focusing binoculars with a rotating diopter on the right eyepiece allowing to adjust refractive differences between the viewer's left and right eyes
  • Galilean binoculars
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  • Binoculars with red-colored multicoatings
  • Double Porro prism design
  • A simulated view of how the [[Andromeda Galaxy]] (Messier 31) would appear in a pair of binoculars
  • Binoculars with adjustable interpupillary distance set for about 63 mm
  • Vector series laser rangefinder 7×42 binoculars can measure distance and angles and also features a 360° digital compass and class 1 eye safe filters
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  • The small exit pupil of a 25×30 telescope and large exit pupils of 9×63 binoculars suitable for use in low light
  • A quarter-wavelength (λ) thick anti-reflection coating, which leads to destructive interference
  • Schmidt–Pechan "roof" prism design
  • Independent focusing binoculars as used by the British military
  • [[Tower Optical]] coin-operated binocular tower viewers
  • US Naval ship 'Big eyes' 20×120 binoculars in fixed mounting
  • 25&nbsp;×&nbsp;150 binoculars adapted for astronomical use
  • 7×50 marine binoculars with dampened [[compass]]
PAIR OF TELESCOPES MOUNTED SIDE-BY-SIDE
Field glass; Binocular instrument; Field Glasses; Field glasses; Binocular Instrument; Binocs; Binocular telescope; Prism binoculars; Phase correction coating; Binoc; Periscope binoculars
τηλεσκόπιο

Definition

binocular vision
¦ noun vision using two eyes with overlapping fields of view, allowing good perception of depth.

Wikipedia

Binocular vision

In biology, binocular vision is a type of vision in which an animal has two eyes capable of facing the same direction to perceive a single three-dimensional image of its surroundings. Binocular vision does not typically refer to vision where an animal has eyes on opposite sides of its head and shares no field of view between them, like in some animals.

Neurological researcher Manfred Fahle has stated six specific advantages of having two eyes rather than just one:

  1. It gives a creature a "spare eye" in case one is damaged.
  2. It gives a wider field of view. For example, humans have a maximum horizontal field of view of approximately 190 degrees with two eyes, approximately 120 degrees of which makes up the binocular field of view (seen by both eyes) flanked by two uniocular fields (seen by only one eye) of approximately 40 degrees.
  3. It can give stereopsis in which binocular disparity (or parallax) provided by the two eyes' different positions on the head gives precise depth perception. This also allows a creature to break the camouflage of another creature.
  4. It allows the angles of the eyes' lines of sight, relative to each other (vergence), and those lines relative to a particular object (gaze angle) to be determined from the images in the two eyes. These properties are necessary for the third advantage.
  5. It allows a creature to see more of, or all of, an object behind an obstacle. This advantage was pointed out by Leonardo da Vinci, who noted that a vertical column closer to the eyes than an object at which a creature is looking might block some of the object from the left eye but that part of the object might be visible to the right eye.
  6. It gives binocular summation in which the ability to detect faint objects is enhanced.

Other phenomena of binocular vision include utrocular discrimination (the ability to tell which of two eyes has been stimulated by light), eye dominance (the habit of using one eye when aiming something, even if both eyes are open), allelotropia (the averaging of the visual direction of objects viewed by each eye when both eyes are open), binocular fusion or singleness of vision (seeing one object with both eyes despite each eye having its own image of the object), and binocular rivalry (seeing one eye's image alternating randomly with the other when each eye views images that are so different they cannot be fused).

Binocular vision helps with performance skills such as catching, grasping, and locomotion. It also allows humans to walk over and around obstacles at greater speed and with more assurance. Optometrists and orthoptists are eyecare professionals who fix binocular vision problems.