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  2. Mapping cone (topology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapping_cone_(topology)

    A map : between simply-connected CW complexes is a homotopy equivalence if and only if its mapping cone is contractible. More generally, a map is called n-connected (as a map) if its mapping cone is n-connected (as a space), plus a little more. [3] [page needed]

  3. Rod cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rod_cell

    Rods are much more common than cones, with about 120 million rod cells compared to 6 to 7 million cone cells. [2] Like cones, rod cells have a synaptic terminal, an inner segment, and an outer segment. The synaptic terminal forms a synapse with another neuron, usually a bipolar cell or a horizontal cell.

  4. Mapping cone (homological algebra) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapping_cone_(homological...

    In homological algebra, the mapping cone is a construction on a map of chain complexes inspired by the analogous construction in topology.In the theory of triangulated categories it is a kind of combined kernel and cokernel: if the chain complexes take their terms in an abelian category, so that we can talk about cohomology, then the cone of a map f being acyclic means that the map is a quasi ...

  5. Layer of rods and cones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layer_of_rods_and_cones

    The elements composing the layer of rods and cones (Jacob's membrane) in the retina of the eye are of two kinds, rod cells and cone cells, the former being much more numerous than the latter except in the macula lutea. Jacob's membrane is named after Irish ophthalmologist Arthur Jacob, who was the first to describe this nervous layer of the ...

  6. Outer nuclear layer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_nuclear_layer

    The spherical rod granules are much more numerous, and are placed at different levels throughout the layer. Their nuclei present a peculiar cross-striped appearance, and prolonged from either extremity of each cell is a fine process; the outer process is continuous with a single rod of the layer of rods and cones; the inner ends in the outer plexiform layer in an enlarged extremity, and is ...

  7. Photoreceptor cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoreceptor_cell

    In rod cells, these together are called rhodopsin. In cone cells, there are different types of opsins that combine with retinal to form pigments called photopsins. Three different classes of photopsins in the cones react to different ranges of light frequency, a selectivity that allows the visual system to transduce color.

  8. Disc shedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_shedding

    The retina contains two types of photoreceptor – rod cells and cone cells. There are about 6-7 million cones that mediate photopic vision, and they are concentrated in the macula at the center of the retina. There are about 120 million rods that are more sensitive than the cones and therefore mediate scotopic vision.

  9. External limiting membrane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_limiting_membrane

    Rods and cones Section of retina. (Membrana limitans externa labeled at right, third from the bottom.) Plan of retinal neurons. (Membrana limitans externa labeled at ...