Thursday, April 23, 2015

Orb Too Big to Be Dust, Shot in 3 Consecutive Photos

Photo date: December 9, 2014.

Various factors can convince us that a photographed orb cannot be dust. For example, the orb can be too bright or too colorful or too fast-moving to be dust. Or perhaps a particular orb can be photographed in three consecutive photos, something we would not expect to see if the orb were a speck of dust floating around. The orb pair shown below was seen in  three consecutive photos shot in a one-minute time frame, and it looked the same way in all three photos. The orb pair was too large to be dust. According to the "orb zone" theory advanced by skeptics, orbs should be no larger than 10 percent of the photo size. But this orb had a height 21 percent of the photo size.


There were no reflective surfaces nearby.

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