Emmetropia is the state of vision in which a faraway object at infinity is in sharp focus with the ciliary muscle in a relaxed state. That condition of the normal eye is achieved when the refractive power of the cornea and eye lens and the axial length of the eye balance out, which focuses rays exactly on the retina, resulting in perfectly sharp distance vision. A human eye in a state of emmetropia requires no corrective lenses for distance; the vision scores well on a visual acuity test (such as an eye chart test). While emmetropia implies an absence of myopia, hyperopia, and other optical aberrations such as astigmatism, a less strict definition requires the spherical equivalent to be between -0.5 and +0.5 D and low enough aberrations such that 20/20 vision is achieved without correction. For example, on a Snellen chart test, emmetropic eyes score at least "6/6"(m) or "20/20"(ft) vision, meaning that at a distance of 20 ft (the first number) they see as well as a "normal" eye at a distance of 20 ft (the second number). Eyes that have enough myopia (near-sighted), hyperopia (far-sighted, excluding latent and facultative hyperopia), or optical aberrations would score worse, e.g. 20/40 (visual acuity of 0.5). Typical emmetropic vision might be 20/15 to 20/10 (visual acuity of 1.3 to 2). Emmetropes with presbyopia might use lenses for near vision. Emmetropia is a state in which the eye is relaxed and focused on an object more than away. The light rays coming from that object are essentially parallel, and the rays are focused on the retina without effort. If the gaze shifts to something closer, light rays from the source are too divergent to be focused without effort. In other words, the eye is automatically focused on things in the distance unless a conscious effort is made to focus elsewhere. For a wild animal or human prehistorical ancestors, that arrangement would be adaptive because it allows for alertness to predators or prey at a distance. Accommodation of the lens does not occur in emmetropia, and the lens is about 3.

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