ID | #1480844744 |
Added | Sun, 04/12/2016 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
|
Resume |
Initial data
An intriguing photo with an unusual translucent figure was made by a resident of Washington, the capital of the United States.
Natasha, Rummelhoff took this photo in her yard during a picnic. Translucent anomaly with two spread wings, is very close to her son Ryker.
Oddly enough, but despite the resemblance, Natasha says she's not religious and doesn't believe in angels. However, she believes that this may be the spirit of her late father.
Assuming "angel" is not just a play of light and shadow, unusual photography is one of the last in a series of strange events that have befallen her son.
According to mother, when the family lived abroad, the boy was troubled by a spirit, which he called "Black". Clashes with the "establishment" is so scared of Riker that the family had to throw a boy's bedroom with Holy water to drive away an evil spirit, or at least convince the boy that sent him away.
I hope that beside Riker is really an angel, and not something that haunted him in the past.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Hypotheses
Re-reflections in lens lenses from a strong light source
The lens consists of a set of lenses (in some lenses - of mirrors), designed for mutual compensation of aberrations and assembled into a single system.
From the contour light (bright light sources behind the subject or next to it), caught in the frame or located outside the frame, parasitic reflections from the internal elements of the lens are formed, called glare (or in slang "hares").
Investigation
On the basis of the appearance of the object, its local time there and in the surrounding halo of is the glare from the fire.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Resume
Re-reflections in lens lenses from a strong light source
The lens consists of a set of lenses (in some lenses - of mirrors), designed for mutual compensation of aberrations and assembled into a single system.
From the contour light (bright light sources behind the subject or next to it), caught in the frame or located outside the frame, parasitic reflections from the internal elements of the lens are formed, called glare (or in slang "hares").
Similar facts
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