On the origin of optics
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文摘
The first optical devices in animals evolved in the Cambrian period. The first reflector known dates from around 508 million years ago (Ma); the first eyes with lenses evolved at around 521 Ma. Consideration of the introduction of vision leads to a hypothesis for the cause of evolution's Big Bang—the Cambrian explosion. Suddenly, and for no obvious reason, the range and variety of life-forms erupted somewhere between 520 and 515 Ma (as limited by of our dating techniques). At no other time in Earth's history there has been such a profusion, such an exuberance, and such an overwhelming diversity in so short time, within one million years. Prior to this Cambrian explosion event, all animals were soft-bodied and mainly worm-like, as they had been for millions of years before that. But during the Cambrian explosion many of the major animal groups on Earth today independently evolved their hard body parts for the first time. Following the appearance of the first trilobites, some animals evolved shells and spines, some with bright colours, to visually warn of their new armour. Others evolved streamlined appearances and swimming oars to advise trilobites that they could not be caught. The Light Switch Theory provides an explanation for what triggered this event—that it was the development of vision (in trilobites); the introduction of optics. Once visual capability arose, it allowed predators to identify prey, triggering an arms race. From here on, vision became a dominant force of evolution and resulted in the eyes and reflecting optics that we have in nature today. This paper provides a summary of the first optical devices to evolve in animals, along with the implications of these in their relevance to the Big Bang of evolution, written for the physical sciences.

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