My dear Jon,
Here’s one. It IS genuine but a little weird to say the least. Take a look at the attached photograph. I took this on board a ship in Norway heading north for Trondheim. We sailed past a rather curious building and I thought I would photograph it just as the sun was going down, as did several other passengers. They had just photographed it, and I was last to arrive just in time to get a quick snap before we passed the building.
Just as I was about to press the shutter a beam of golden sunlight lit up the structure – nothing else, just that! Naturally I took the shot but when I looked again there was a strange golden ball to the left of the picture. Neither my pal nor anyone else around me had the same impression and I had this on the two shots I took. There was nothing wrong with the camera.
How curious that this shard of sunlight hit at the moment I took the shot and the golden ball, made up of several smaller balls appeared like some mass ball of energy hurtling through the air on my photograph.
It could be a glitch with my camera (doubtful) or I may have been lucky enough to have photographed something extraordinary – a ball of energy or something else emanating from the last but sudden warm rays of the sun in sub zero temperatures.
I don’t have the answer but I hope you find it interesting. The photograph is not doctored in any way.
Carl
Thursday, October 14, 2010
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5 comments:
Was the weather thundery at the time?Could it have been ball lightening?
This is most likely down to internal reflections inside the camera lens system. That central area of reflected light will be extremely bright, but if the camera uses the entire image as a way of metering the light levels, then the iris will be quite wide open and will allow quite a lot of light into the camera.
This will reflect back off the surfaces of the lens train inside the camera, and give rise to the artefact that you see in the picture.
Did you see this artefact with the naked eye before or after you took the photo?
What a magnificent shot.
I am certainly no expert photographic analyst, but would suggest that the effect we are seeing, is a "Lens Flare" due to the suns rays being reflected back from the windows of the building, into the camera lens.
This effect is quite common and is without shadow of doubt the cause of many (if not most) of the claimed photographs of UFOs and ghosts.
Hello folks,
The weather was calm and not thundery at all. I never saw the ball before or after with my naked eye. Naturally I have had to form the opinion that it is camera/lens related but I wanted to share the photograph with you all - shame to waste it. I did take literally hundreds of other sun shots on that trip with no extra images on the camera. I guess it is just timing.Thank you.
The weather was calm and not thundery. I never saw the ball with my naked eye but the sunlight happened in a flash, literally. I do accept it must be camera/lens related but it is still an interesting photograph I hope you agree. I took literally hundreds of sunsets and reflections on that trip and no other photograph showed this. It's all about timing and light and all good fun anyway. Thank you...
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