Type of Lenses: For the correction of presbyopia, bifocal lenses or progressive lenses are used.
Structure and Reasoning: Bifocal lenses consist of two parts: a lower part for near vision and an upper part for distance vision. The lower part is typically a convex lens to aid in near vision, while the upper part is a concave lens to help with distance vision.
The reason for using bifocal lenses is to correct the vision for both distant and near objects without changing glasses.
Lenses can form different types of images depending upon their focal length and position of object. A convex lens can create real, inverted or virtual, erect images, while a concave lens forms only virtual and diminished images. The focal length determines the power of lens. Convex lenses have positive focal length while concave lenses have negative focal length by convention. When lenses are placed together, their combined power is determined by the sum of their individual powers.
The part of human eye which controls the amount of light entering into it is:
Identify from the following the ray diagram which shows the correct path of the reflected ray for the ray incident on a concave mirror as shown:

