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Why do objects appear smaller far away?

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Answer: Smaller angle on retina

Air makes them shrink visuallyWrong. Air doesn't shrink images (though haze reduces clarity). Objects appear smaller because they occupy smaller angle in field of view.

Smaller angle on retinaCorrect! Angular size = object's size / distance from eye. Close object: large angle, many retinal cells activated—appears large. Distant object: small angle, few cells—appears small. Perspective: parallel lines (railroad tracks) seem to converge at horizon—same principle. Moon illusion: horizon moon seems larger than overhead (same angular size ~0.5°, brain interprets differently). Size constancy helps brain judge distance!

Brain adjusts perceptionWrong. Brain interprets size based on context, but basic reason is geometry—distant objects subtend smaller angle at eye.

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