I agree with that explanation. Only curious thing for me is, I have never cleaned the camera lens and I have at least 10 other photos of the moon/night sky -- taken on different days/nights -- using the same camera and do not see any "orbs" in them. But perhaps the dust particles blew off/fell off before I took those photos. Other curious thing about these photos -- which were taken one after the other on the same night (I just moved to a different spot on the road), is that the "orbs" or dust particles are in different "positions" in the night sky and I would think that if they were dust particles on the camera lens, then they would be located in the same "position"/spot in each photo and they aren't, they are in different places. But the counter "argument" is that the dust could have moved to different parts of the lens when I changed position between shots. Oh well, it was fun to think they might be real. :)
Oh, Nancy, I wasn't giving an explanation for it, because if anybody would have orbs flying around it would be you ;-D. But they're never on the lens. They're in the air. And if a flash is involved, it lights them up like crazy. That yours have no flash involved make them all the more compelling. IN fact your photos are more compelling than the usual since flashes are often involved. I've been shown dozens of photos of people claiming they're orbs, and I say they're dust, and then I'll stomp hard on the ground, wait for ten seconds for the "invisible" particles to rise into view, and then have them take a picture and the picture is filled with alien orbs everywhere in the shot.
You know me. I'm the voice reason just telling people that what they think is miraculous can also just be dust (which to me is every bit as miraculous as an alien orb!).
This reply was deleted.
You need to be a member of Blue Emerald Social to add comments!
Comments
These may be legit orbs, but what a LOT of people hope are orbs, are just dust particles, pretty much 95% of the time, or even more often.
I agree with that explanation. Only curious thing for me is, I have never cleaned the camera lens and I have at least 10 other photos of the moon/night sky -- taken on different days/nights -- using the same camera and do not see any "orbs" in them. But perhaps the dust particles blew off/fell off before I took those photos. Other curious thing about these photos -- which were taken one after the other on the same night (I just moved to a different spot on the road), is that the "orbs" or dust particles are in different "positions" in the night sky and I would think that if they were dust particles on the camera lens, then they would be located in the same "position"/spot in each photo and they aren't, they are in different places. But the counter "argument" is that the dust could have moved to different parts of the lens when I changed position between shots. Oh well, it was fun to think they might be real. :)
Oh, Nancy, I wasn't giving an explanation for it, because if anybody would have orbs flying around it would be you ;-D. But they're never on the lens. They're in the air. And if a flash is involved, it lights them up like crazy. That yours have no flash involved make them all the more compelling. IN fact your photos are more compelling than the usual since flashes are often involved. I've been shown dozens of photos of people claiming they're orbs, and I say they're dust, and then I'll stomp hard on the ground, wait for ten seconds for the "invisible" particles to rise into view, and then have them take a picture and the picture is filled with alien orbs everywhere in the shot.
You know me. I'm the voice reason just telling people that what they think is miraculous can also just be dust (which to me is every bit as miraculous as an alien orb!).