A British scientist has designed a unique pair of glasses that can be adjust by a wearer without any optician's help, and one million pairs of which will soon be distributed in India.
A British scientist has designed a unique pair of glasses that can be adjust by a wearer without any optician's help, and one million pairs of which will soon be distributed in India.
Prof Joshua Silver is hopeful that his self-adjusting glasses could enable a billion people in the developing world to receive spectacles for the first time within just over a decade.Silver, a retired Oxford University physics professor, is even preparing to launch an ambitious scheme in India to distribute one million pairs in a year.
He revealed that he came up with the idea in what he describes as a "glimpse of the obvious", reports the Telegraph.
The adaptive glasses are designed in such a way that they can be "tuned" by the wearer to suit their eyes, and that too without the need for a prescription.
In fact, the spectacles can help both short-sighted and long-sighted people.
He started working on the idea of developing an adjustable spectacle after a chance conversation in 1985, when he and a colleague were discussing optical lenses.
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He focussed on the principle that thicker lenses are more powerful than thin ones.
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The tough plastic glasses have thin sacs of liquid in the centre of each lens. They come with small syringes attached to each arm with a dial for the wearer to add or remove fluid from the lens.
After adjusting the lenses, the syringes are removed and the spectacles can be worn just like a prescription pair.
The invention would provide spectacles for the first time to millions of people in poorer parts of the world, where opticians are in short supply.
Already, a trial project, supported by the Department for International Development, has seen thousands of pairs distributed in Third World countries.
Silver's aim is to eventually reach 100 million people a year, with a target of one billion in total by 2020.
Source-ANI
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