@ millirad: ROTFLMAO !!
seriously, it's a common thing, due to the structure of our retinal element ..... peripherial elements of the retinal matrix are much more sensitive to the light than central ones, that instead are less sensitive to the light, but more sensitive to the "contrast" and colors .....
let me try to explain better ..... retina is covered from 2 types of "sensors", call them this way, called cones and rods ..... cones are sensitive to the colors, where rods, instead, are sensitive only to the light level (or, better said, to the light level with a peak at 498nm) but not to the spectral composition, and are more sensitive of the cones ..... also, there are something like 110 or 120 millions of rods, distributed in a grid, where instead there are just approximatively 7 millions of cones, concentrated in the central area (the one where you see better)
Your brain, also, take part in that, cause when you look with the central area, it "compensate" the image, and also, close or open the iris as diaphragm, for limit the intensity ..... if instead you look with your "lateral vision field", the light hit just the rods, they cannot give you a clear image, and also there's less concentration of them in the peripherial area of the retina, but are more sensitive to the different levels of the light, and also more quick in resopnse, also if they work only as a b/w camera ..... this make your peripherial vision area more sensitive to low levels and quick fluctuations
It's also an old trick from astronomy, that one to use peripherial vision for see stars that you can't see looking them straight ..... looking at a lateral area, respect from where you think there's a weak star, if there's one, you see it's light with the peripherial zone, much better than with the central zone
Hope it's clear, you know my english is not so good, sorry.
Edit: there is also another thing to considerate, sorry i remembered it only now ..... from laterally, the light is passing the crystaline (lens inside the eye) in diagonal path ..... it act as a more magnificating lens, in this way (never tried to look through a thick glass lens straight, and then roll it diagonally ? ..... when you do it, it ofcourse distort, but also increase the magnification

)