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Why can't we see UV light?

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Answer: Retina lacks UV photoreceptors

Retina lacks UV photoreceptorsCorrect! Human photoreceptors (rods and cones) are sensitive to wavelengths ~380-700nm (visible light). UV wavelengths are shorter (<380nm) and don't trigger our cone/rod responses. Additionally, the lens and cornea absorb most UV, protecting the retina. Some animals (bees, birds) see UV—they have photoreceptors tuned to those wavelengths!

UV too weak to detectWrong. UV intensity isn't the issue. We lack photoreceptors that respond to UV wavelengths, just as we can't see infrared.

Brain filters UV wavelengthsWrong. Brain doesn't filter UV. The retina simply has no photoreceptors that respond to UV wavelengths to generate signals for the brain.

Go deeper: Photoreceptor
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