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Llifs – What the eyes cannot see

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With eyes on Auroras, discussions quickly turn to what we can see with our own eyes compared to what has been shown on the camera or mobile phone. It makes me wonder, what does not see the eyes? To discuss this topic, first we need to look at how to see the color in the first place.

How do we see the color?

The retina inside our eye discovers these changes in the light through the so -called cones and bars. There are three types of cones sensitive for different wavelengths of light. This is how we can discover the color. Sometimes, the person’s cones do not work as it should, and this is where the color of the color can come. There are four main types of colorblindness that affect about 8-10 % of the population. Some people may not be able to receive red light, others are blue light that some can only see in black and white.

Photo source: http://www.theinkrag.com/colour_blindness/monochromacy.html

The bars in our eyes are those sensitive to light. They do not explain the color, just light. Adaptation is what is indicated when the retina inside the eye adapts to different levels of light. We are all able to a certain degree of natural night vision. Think about the time you are to achieve a paranormal while you are in a room and then expel the lights. Initially, you seem to be in the black dark. The longer you are in the room, the exact of your eyes and you can start seeing the elements in the dark more clearly. It usually takes a person from 20 to 30 minutes to control it properly, yet it is said that it takes two hours until the process occurs properly.

When we test something like Aurora Borealis (Northern Lights) and Aurora Australis (Southern Lights), these natural phenomena are made of electromagnetic radiation. The adaptation process means that we can see and treat light slightly better at night, but we just see black and white and gray shades. The light is often very dull. Our cameras do not have the same restrictions that the human eye has. It can be programmed to allow more light to enter (such as the phone in night vision mode). That is why many people took amazing pictures of Ura, but they only reported seeing a small smear in the sky.

According to NASA:

The visible light spectrum is part of the electromagnetic spectrum that the human eye can look at. Simply put, this range of wavelength is called visible light. Usually, human eye can discover wavelengths from 380 to 700 nm.

All electromagnetic radiation is light, but we can only see a small part of this radiation – the part we call visible light. The conical cells operate in our eyes as a reception device that has been seized on the wavelengths in this narrow range of the spectrum. Other parts of the spectrum have very large or very small wavelengths and vitality of the biological restrictions of our perception.

Since the full spectrum of visible light is transmitted through the post, the wavelengths are separated from the colors of the rainbow because each color is a different wavelength. Violet has the shortest wavelength, in about 380 nm, and red has the longest wavelength, at about 700 nm.

https://science.nasa.gov/ms/09_visibleight/

In each side of the spectrum behind what the human eye can see, you have infrared light and UV rays. The human eye cannot see this, but many cameras and devices can.

Visible

We know that in extraordinary investigations, people are often depicted using night vision and modified cameras to detect more UV and infrared rays. That is why you see videos where people are green or purple. The theory is very simple. If the devices are highlighting in a range outside what the human eye can see, they may be able to see a soul or ghost. I assume for me that he was placed in his right perspective when many experienced Aurora loved a few weekends. I couldn’t see much of my eyes, perhaps a dark purple tinge in the sky, but if I didn’t know to look, I will not be wise. What the iPhone 13 Pro could see was completely different. This is what I picked up by keeping the sensor open for 3 seconds (night vision mode).

Sarah Levis image

For human eye, it is certainly not bright and beautiful as the image appears. In fact, I saw on social media a lot of disappointment of people who saw all these amazing images unaware that they did not seem like that of the naked eye. They did not know that they would need a camera or phone to be able to see it in its full glory. Regardless of the way I saw it, for me it was the moment of a bucket list and in a slightly modest way. I felt incredibly small in what I felt as a huge form of things that I could not see and I have not yet understood. Then he made me think of a paranormal in the same vein. What is correct in front of our eyes that we cannot see? It may be much further than what the camera can discover. Perhaps there is absolutely nothing. This makes it more interesting for me. I would like to think there is something that I cannot see because in many ways, I feel it is present. The feeling of the intestine I think. There was a time when we could see Auroras because technology did not exist. Perhaps this technology has not been present yet to see something pawing, or perhaps this is what I think in any case is that we are not only supposed to see it. For me, as Ura was, a paranormal is one of the puzzles that I think is very personal and will remain this way. This is why we all imagine it completely differently. Regardless of what is really present, for one night, many have been completely united all over the world. It does not matter what they believe in, who they are or even where they were. One night, we all got the experience of some magic and this in itself was Paranormal As it is definitely for many event once in a lifetime.


Here are some articles on similar topics you may enjoy

Lidar, Face ID Technology and the Puzzle

Dark adaptation

Will HADAR be the next big thing in the extraordinary investigation?

Eye parallel or trick?


References:

https://rmt.pressbooks.pub/colourtheory1/chapter/light-leectromagnetic-radiation/

https://science.nasa.gov/ms/09_visibleight/

https://futurism.com/how-We-se-The-Aurora-borealis-camera-vs-human-yes-2

http://www.theinkrag.com/colour_blindness/monochromacy.html

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