Averted Vision: Getting The Most From What Nature Gave You
Using averted vision means looking slightly off to one side   rather than straight on. It exposes the most sensitive part of your eye   and lets you see much fainter objects. If you’ve never tried this   before, you’ll be amazed at how much more you can see, with or without a   telescope.
The Basics
• The retina of your eye has two types of light-detecting cells: rods and cones.
• Cones detect color under well-lit conditions and are densely packed   in the fovea, near the center of your retina. Cones help you see color   and fine detail, which is why you look directly at objects you want to   see well, like books, movies, and faces.
• Rods are mostly away from the center of your retina. You see less   detail and no color with the rods, but they are much more sensitive to   light.
• The way your eye is structured means you see the faintest objects   if you look 8 to 16 degrees off center. The exact angle is a little   different for each person.
• This only works if the object you’re looking at is on the nose-ward   side of your eye. So look slightly rightward with your right eye and   leftward with your left eye. Do the reverse and you’ll expose the blind   spot of your eye and you won’t see a thing.
 A cross section of the human retina, showing rod and cone cells.
A Deeper Look
A cross section of the human retina, showing rod and cone cells.
A Deeper Look
• If you’re using both eyes, as with binoculars, looking only   sideways makes one eye more sensitive at the expense of the other. The   solution? Look up. That uses another rod-rich part of your retina above   the fovea.
• With a little practice, averted vision reveals objects 20-40x fainter than direct vision. That’s a huge difference.
• Rods are most sensitive to blue-green light, but your optics nerve   and brain are not wired to detect color when only your rod cells are   exposed to light. That’s why faint objects appear grayish-white.
 The sensitivity of rods and cones to light across the spectrum
Good To Know
The sensitivity of rods and cones to light across the spectrum
Good To Know
The blinking nebula, NGC 6826, is an object that most dramatically   demonstrates averted vision. Stare directly at this blue-green planetary   nebula and you see only the dim central star. Look slightly to the side   and the faint nebula around the star appears suddenly. When you switch   from straight on to averted vision, the nebula appears to blink on and   off. It’s darned impressive.
Personal View
I usually begin with a short lesson on averted vision when showing   faint objects to beginners. When they try it, they usually gasp at the   subtle detail that suddenly appears.