The Arizona Republic

Your wife could change in the blink of an eye (or less)

- Reach Clay Thompson at clay.thompson@arizonarep­ublic.com or 602-444-8612.

Clay Thompson is off today. Here’s a classic from Dec. 26, 2004.

Today’s question:

I have wondered about this for a long time. Since sight involves light, do we see things at the speed of light or is there a time delay? If I look at my wife, am I seeing her instantane­ously or as she appeared to be some undetermin­ed amount of time ago?

Well, I don’t know. I’ve never seen your wife so I can’t tell how quickly she changes. I’m sorry. That was just a dumb joke. This is actually a very good question. I just don’t know how you people keep coming up with such interestin­g stuff. OK, when you see something, light hits your cornea, goes through your pupil, goes through a bunch of other stuff like blood vessels and nerves and watery stuff, hits the lens and ends up on the retina.

That’s where the real work gets under way. The retina converts the light into electrical impulses and shoots them off to the brain. Apparently the informatio­n the brain gets is not especially detailed, so it dips into your memory, such as it is, to fill out the details.

For example, your eye might see your wife, but the informatio­n your brain gets is just sort of generally wife-ish looking, so your brain kind of remembers seeing her around before and just announces to the rest of your body that the eyes picked up on the little woman.

I could throw in a cheap-shot wife joke here, I suppose, but I like to think I’m bigger than that.

So how long does all this take? I am told it’s about 50 millisecon­ds — considerab­ly less than a blink of the eye.

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