Owned oyster Saint-Jacques 'special telescope'

However, not everyone knows this soft-bodied marine animal possesses a sophisticated visual system that can have up to 200 eyes of 1mm size.

Grilled Saint-Jacques shellfish is one of the indispensable dishes in the Christmas season in France.

However, not everyone knows this species possesses a sophisticated visual system that can have up to 200 eyes of 1mm size. This visual system functions as a type of telescope.

According to the Weizmann Institute of Science study in Israel recently published in the journal Science, Saint-Jacques shellfish as well as some species living deep in the seabed have a mirror system to create mirror images from the light. Bright and programmed to receive light waves that penetrate into the waters where they live.

Picture 1 of Owned oyster Saint-Jacques 'special telescope'

Scallop Saint-Jacques.

These mirrors are made of extremely small numbers of complex 3-dimensional shapes that minimize light aberration and produce clear images.

These mirrors produce images on a double-layer retina from individual images that the shellfish sees in the scope of observation and marginality.

That structure helps Saint-Jacques oysters have a vision of about 250 degrees compared to the 180 degrees of the human eye.

Scientists also consider that the eyes of this oyster also have a concave sphere mirror to reflect light.

This is an interesting discovery because 'the mirror system is made up of many cubes in this multitude of soft-bodied eyes that are amazingly similar to the segmented mirrors in reflective telescopes " .

The findings of Israeli scientists are expected to pave the way for the creation of new optical instruments, as well as new applications for image processing or sensors.

Update 17 December 2018
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