Actually, forget I said that... I hadn't read what camera it was ;-)

IT could still be some kind of analogous effect, I guess - I don't know how the CCD of those devices gets read out.

S

Steve Jolly wrote:

Isn't it the slit of the shutter repeatedly catching the propeller as the former moves down and the latter goes round? It's a very nice effect, whatever the cause :-)

S

graywolf wrote:

I have seen a couple of similar photos. I am not sure, but would speculate that it a strobe effect of the propeller breaking up the light.

--

frank theriault wrote:

What a wild effect!!

Anyone have any idea what causes that? I've never seen that before.

Amazing.

cheers,
frank

"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears it is true." -J. Robert Oppenheimer




From: David Mann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: my PAW
Date: Sat, 21 Feb 2004 17:29:59 +1300

I might as well jump on this bandwagon.

http://www.digistar.com/~dmann/temp/plane.html

Unretouched, straight from the camera.

Cheers,

- Dave

http://www.digistar.com/~dmann/


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