Publication | Closed Access
Visual Sensations Induced by Relativistic Nitrogen Nuclei
35
Citations
8
References
1972
Year
Beam TransportRetinaPhysicsOphthalmologyNeurophysiologyVisual Sensations InducedPrinceton Particle AcceleratorEye TrackingPhysiological OpticVision ResearchNeuroscienceVisual PathwayVisual ProcessingSynchrotron RadiationOptic NerveIndividual Nitrogen NucleiSocial SciencesRadiology
The ability of the human eye to detect nitrogen nuclei that enter the retina at speeds just above the Cerenkov threshold has been confirmed in an experiment at the Princeton Particle Accelerator. A system for beam transport and subject alignment delivered individual nitrogen nuclei onto a spot 3 millimeters in diameter on the retina at a visual angle of 7 degrees on the temporal side of the fovea. The beam particles entered the retina within 25 degrees of normal and induced visual sensations that had the appearance of streaks for three out of four subjects.
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