The radius of the average cow eyeball is about 1/2 inch (15mm) with a diameter of 1.2 inches (30mm). The human eyeball size varies, but on average it is 1 inch (24mm). However, every other part of the eyeball that a cow eyeball shares similarities with a human eyeball is found to be larger in a cow's eyeball.
If a cow looks into the light of a car, or if any other light is shone on their eyes, their eyes look like they are glowing. If you did the same thing to a human, this would not happen. This is caused by the tapetum lucidum in cows, which is an area of chartreuse pigment located just below the retina at the level of the choroid, in the back of the cow's eyeball. The light that enters the eye reflects within the eye and amplifies low levels of light, which improves their vision at night.
Cows can see color, but the distribution of rod and cone cells in the cow's retina does not perceive colors the same way humans do. It's hard to tell how cows see colors, but the way the rod and cone cells are spread out in the retina shows that they can, in fact, differentiate between colors like red and green, blue and yellow, black and white, but in a less advanced way than humans do.
We know how the tapetum lucidum increases the cow's night vision ability, but the internal light reflection that it causes can affect their vision in the daytime. There's no real way to know for sure, but by looking at the retina and visual system of cow eyeballs is it thought to believe that cows can see at a level equivalent to 20/80 in the daytime.