One for the brains trust and petermac33 I would be open to suggestions to explain this photograph.
Yesterday 16th of June 2020 @ 10.46am Facing the west I took a couple of photographs of a rainbow. Both photo's were taken seconds apart, from the same location with the same camera as verified by file. I have just down loaded and noticed a slight difference in the images.
Image A. DSCN6604.
Image B DSCN 6605
Those with sharp eyes may have noticed almost in the centre of the arc on image A there is what appears to be a white line originating from the spectrum, it appears to originate in the arc and from this perspective point down, this line does not appear on image B, nor was it visible through the lens when the shot was taken.
Below is the cropped and enhanced section of image A.
Now I am not an expert on imaginary interpretation and have really no idea what it is, had it been on the lens it should have shown on both shots, I think it is something natural but I'm curious, any ideas?
It looks like a typical trace of a meteor or space junk reentry travelling west to east.
Just coincidence it ends at the rainbow.
A few seconds is all it would have taken for tit to flare out.
It looks like a typical trace of a meteor or space junk reentry travelling west to east.
Just coincidence it ends at the rainbow.
A few seconds is all it would have taken for tit to flare out.
But it's cloudy and those clouds are the low type.
If i didn't know better i'd say it was a contrail (sorry chemtrail ). But i don't know how brief they can really be. Maybe the right kind of atmosphere would allow for a quick dissipation?
a stray gamma ray/neutrino across the camera sensor? Maybe you've recorded here something the boffins have been trying to capture for ages. I think you need professional advice, a meteorologist or physicist maybe could help.
If i didn't know better i'd say it was a contrail (sorry chemtrail ). But i don't know how brief they can really be. Maybe the right kind of atmosphere would allow for a quick dissipation?
I discounted them on that. it's obviously high humidity, and I've never seen a contrail vanish that quick, but certainly looks like one.
Abnormality or anomaly?
Why cant we have both?
Thanks for all the suggestions, as I said I haven't a clue so cant dismiss any, but if the dome has sprung a leak best send someone up there to plug it.
a stray gamma ray/neutrino across the camera sensor? Maybe you've recorded here something the boffins have been trying to capture for ages. I think you need professional advice, a meteorologist or physicist maybe could help.
or men in white coats
or the Men In Black and there little pen memory erasers.
I think you need professional advice, a meteorologist or physicist maybe could help.
I'm confused.. All the experts you ever need are here. From chainsaws to Brain surgery, we've got it all.. A small meteorological phenomenon would be child's play...
With the low cloud, it isn't contrails or space junk. Contrails can disappear quickly, but they don't form below low cloud like that.
I'd think it's some sort of lens flare or lighting effect. Or just small piece of dust on your lens, that blew away between shots.
Did you change the aperture between shots? Different settings would show dirt on the lens better than others.
hmm I've just spotted something else, what do you see here?
What's that stuff on the hill, and the trail on the right? Is this a rocket range? weather stuff perhaps?
a stray gamma ray/neutrino across the camera sensor? Maybe you've recorded here something the boffins have been trying to capture for ages. I think you need professional advice, a meteorologist or physicist maybe could help.
or men in white coats
or the Men In Black and there little pen memory erasers.
Can't say Men in Black for two reasons .
Gender discrimination and racist.
That kind of sh.t can start a riot !
hmm I've just spotted something else, what do you see here?
What's that stuff on the hill, and the trail on the right? Is this a rocket range? weather stuff perhaps?
And also, look at the tree line on the right. Just above in the first photo, and on it in the 2nd photo
edit: you spotted it already. But it looksto be on the lens or camera related.
yes the bottom one starts in the trees, wouldn't think anybody is going to launch a rocket from there. So why does it move relative to the image? The camera is aimed a bit lower on the second image, so a lens artefact does fit the bill