In what is currently chapter 12, tricks, the eyesight of Vampires was established (being able to read very tiny handwriting from across a baseball field). I imagine that to be about as visible as Jasper’s scars, which are described in chapter 28 as unobtrusive, faintly raised crescents to human sight.
So what’s up there? Why does Bella have to get closer to see these scars?
Or am I just drastically overestimating the size of the clearing “Tricks” takes place in (Standard Baseball field is about 300 feet long)?
Bella can see Jasper’s scars (and other identifying features) from quite a long way away. She can see his eye color from an even longer way away. Exact distances are irrelevant; relative distance is all it takes to make it work.
Is the ratio of visual-acuity-to-movement-speed among vampires higher or lower than humans? That is, assuming average vampires and average humans, is the time to cross the distance across which you can positively identify someone about the same? (To put it another way, when Bella identifies Jasper, does she have a better or worse chance to escape than if a human saw another human who they wish to run away from?)
The limiting factors in human chases (losing the person, getting tired, giving up) don’t apply here, so all that matters is that Jasper is faster than Bella.
A minor nitpick/question:
In what is currently chapter 12, tricks, the eyesight of Vampires was established (being able to read very tiny handwriting from across a baseball field). I imagine that to be about as visible as Jasper’s scars, which are described in chapter 28 as unobtrusive, faintly raised crescents to human sight.
So what’s up there? Why does Bella have to get closer to see these scars?
Or am I just drastically overestimating the size of the clearing “Tricks” takes place in (Standard Baseball field is about 300 feet long)?
Bella can see Jasper’s scars (and other identifying features) from quite a long way away. She can see his eye color from an even longer way away. Exact distances are irrelevant; relative distance is all it takes to make it work.
Is the ratio of visual-acuity-to-movement-speed among vampires higher or lower than humans? That is, assuming average vampires and average humans, is the time to cross the distance across which you can positively identify someone about the same? (To put it another way, when Bella identifies Jasper, does she have a better or worse chance to escape than if a human saw another human who they wish to run away from?)
The limiting factors in human chases (losing the person, getting tired, giving up) don’t apply here, so all that matters is that Jasper is faster than Bella.