Sunday, March 22, 2015

Orb Glow Apparently Reflected on Distant Surfaces

Photo date: December 9, 2014.  Photographer: Mark Mahin.

Below is a photo taken in Grand Central Station in New York:


Now here is a closeup cropped from the top right corner of the photo above:

orb face

There is something very interesting in this photo. The orb seems to be emitting a kind of blue glow that seems to be reflected on the surfaces behind it. Note the blue line in the photo. The glow is only very faintly reflected on the brown stone surface, but is much more clearly reflected on the dark greenish surface, which is the left edge of one of the massive windows of Grand Central Station.

Why is this difference important? It basically proves that this is a distant object, not a speck of dust near the camera. If it was a speck of dust near the camera, we would never see such a clear blue line in the photo above, exactly matching the edge of the window. This photo is therefore powerful evidence against the theory that orbs are merely dust near the camera. For other photos of the same type, see my blog posts with the label "air orb too distant to be dust."

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