Sunday, March 28, 2010

Orbs - are they paranormal?

Though there is overwhelming evidence that orbs are out of focus bits of dust and raindrops, many people still continue to believe that they are paranormal in origin. The orb zone theory explains the reported appearance and characteristics of orbs very well. By contrast, paranormal orb theories are vague. So why do people stick with paranormal theories?

faces below. Cleaning your lens won't get rid of orbs but it might change the 'detail' inside them! ** Dust stays in the air continuously, mainly because of air currents. Air currents are produced by object movement, drafts and convection (any difference in temperature between surfaces in a room generates convection). Out of doors there are also winds to move dust about, in addition to convection. Because such winds are often more powerful than air currents inside, larger bits of dust may be picked up and moved around. You may not see it but dust is always there nevertheless.




Q: If orbs are dust or insects, why are they circular instead of dust or insect-shaped?
A: Orbs are not formed from the whole object but only the
brightest highlights. So there is no reason why they should be dust or insect-shaped. They are, instead, expanded circles of confusion. An experiment here, uses insects to show how they suddenly change from insect-shaped objects into circular orbs.


Q: If it's dust, why don't I get orbs in all my photos?A: The fact that dust is omnipresent does not mean that orbs will show up all the time, however. Almost all orbs appear only when flash is used. Even in flash photos, orbs are not that common. Their appearance depends on a number of exposure variables (see next question) that are changed automatically (without user intervention) between shots. Orbs show up better against dark backgrounds. Also, certain cameras are more prone to showing orbs than others (compact models yield more orbs than DSLRs, for instance).


Q: Why have orbs appeared just recently when dust has always been around?
A: Orbs became much more common when digital photography took off. That's because the early digital cameras had sensor chips that were physically much smaller than the 35mm frame size of film cameras. That, in turn, meant that the cameras had a much increased depth of field. As a consequence, objects that were just too close to be in focus were much closer to the lens and also to the flash unit. Previously, in film cameras, these 'just out of focus' objects were usually too far from the flash to show up*. See
OZT.


* You CAN get orbs with film cameras but they are much rarer.

Q:I got lots of orbs in one photo and then none in another taken just seconds later - surely dust can't do that?
A: There are two aspects to this problem. Firstly, the questioner is assuming that dust is evenly distributed through the air. In reality, dust occurs in clusters and gaps, constantly driven by air movement and
atmospheric ions. Air movement is caused by the wind, movement of objects in the air and, particularly, convection currents caused by minor differences in temperature across distance. The orb zone, where dust appears as orbs, is tiny. It is therefore perfectly possible for there to be a cluster of dust particles present in the zone at one moment and a gap at the next.
Secondly, the orb zone itself varies in size between each photo. Modern cameras are highly automated and may vary many exposure parameters between shots, even when there are few apparent changes in the scene itself. The slightest alteration in lighting, the field of view or focusing will change the parameters. Also, if the camera moves even slightly between shots, which is inevitable when it is hand-held, this will effectively change the scene, also changing exposure parameters. Anything that affects the size of the orb zone will have a big effect on the number of orbs seen, even if the dust was spread evenly.



longest duration with no nearby subject to illuminate. Also, the dark background will show up faint orbs well. The number of orbs is likely to vary rapidly in such a situation, partly because of the high air movement outside but also because the camera will struggle to cope with an almost black scene and so will vary its exposure parameters a lot.


In summary, dust is not distributed evenly so it is entirely possible for orb numbers to vary drastically between shots. Also, the orb zone size may change significantly between shots with automated cameras, affecting orb numbers.


* Automatic white balance may also affect the visibility and colour of orbs. This can vary drastically between photos depending on whether there is a white object in the field of view!


Q: Orbs appear mostly in haunted locations. Why is this, if orbs are dust?
A: If you look at the answer to the previous question you will see that orb numbers can vary a lot randomly. As with any random variations, apparent patterns will inevitably appear. If, for instance, you take most of your photos on ghost vigils, it is inevitable that most of your orbs will be recorded at haunted locations. To do a meaningful test you would need to take equal, large numbers of photos in haunted and non-haunted locations under the same controlled conditions and compare the two. Luckily it has already been
tested in a controlled experiment. There was found to be NO significant difference between the numbers of orbs in the two locations.



Q: I got an orb when there was a high reading on the EMF meter. Doesn't that make it paranormal?

Q: I felt a presence just as the photo of an orb was taken. Surely that's paranormal?

Q: Orbs appear when I ask for them. Doesn't that mean they're intelligent?
A: In all these cases, and similar ones, it is a coincidence. There are a number of factors that affect when you get an orb in a photo. These include:



this question.


We tend to have a selective memory when it comes to coincidences, particularly if they have an apparent significance. If event A happens at the same time as event B, we will frequently remember it, while forgetting all the times when A happened but not B and when B happened but not A. So if event A is a high reading on an EMF meter and event B is taking a photo containing an orb, we tend to remember it when they happen together. If event A is a feeling of presence and event B an orb, it might appear even more significant. To show a real causal relationship, however, you'd need to collect a statistically useful sample of all A and B events and show they happened more frequently than chance by a statistically significant margin.

Q: Orbs have been reported behind objects in photos. Surely, that shows they are not dust just in front of the camera lens.
A: It is actually extraordinary that ALL orbs occur IN FRONT of everything else in almost every orb photo, regardless of what else is in the picture. Another odd fact is that orbs almost never appear to be larger than around 10% of the frame size (larger circular shapes in photos generally turn out to be
lens flare). If orbs were really objects floating in the air, why do they always occupy a sharply defined zone just in front of the camera but never close enough to look very big? Another odd thing is that there are photos of orbs taken against a background where everything is too close to be in focus. This implies that the orbs must ALSO be out of focus since they must also be too close to be in focus.
So, what about the orbs apparently behind objects in rare photos? When you examine such photos you will notice that it only ever involves faint orbs apparently behind dark, light or strongly coloured objects. One problem with digital photographs is that they have a smaller 'latitude' (or dynamic range) than film. That means they lose detail in dark, light or highly saturated areas. The faint orb has, in effect, been overwhelmed by the strong colour of the object behind. You might, if you are lucky, using photo software enhancement, be able to show that the orb is, in fact, in front of the object. However, in some cases the detail is simply irrecoverable. Compact cameras tend to be suffer most from low latitude. Also, photos with a high level of electronic noise and / or shot with a high ISO may have lower latitude than other shots.



In this photo you can see a cluster of orbs in front of a copy of our newsletter, ASSAP News. Note the parts 'missing' (over the lighter areas of the photo) from some of the the fainter orbs in the cluster over the word 'News'. The brighter orb below, over the ASSAP logo, is dense enough not to lose any bits to the light background. This shows how bits of orbs can go 'missing', leading to the idea that they are behind objects in the photo.



here.
In addition, orbs can appear to be behind an object in the photo because of over-processing. This is where a photo has been heavily processed in photo software and the fine details of a faint orb have been effectively eliminated. There is an example of that





Q: I have seen orbs with the naked eye. How is that possible if they are a photographic artifact?A: People have reported seeing small lights in the air, very rarely, for centuries. No one called them orbs before the arrival of the camera orbs. There is no evidence that these phenomena are in any way related. Orbs are the circles that were NOT seen at the time of exposure. All the evidence points to orbs being photographic artifacts while lights seen at the time could be paranormal or, indeed, another natural phenomenon but they are NOT orbs!





If you do photograph a real light phenomenon, it is highly likely to appear bright, uniform and featureless in the picture. It may well appear white, even if it looked another colour at the time of exposure. This is because, as it is a light source, it will probably be over-exposed. Your camera's exposure system is unlikely to take into account small glowing objects when deciding on its exposure which is why you get over exposure. If you use a flash it might overwhelm any faint light phenomenon so that it may not appear at all.





Q: I've seen orbs while filming that were not visible to the naked eye. How is that possible?A: Very occasionally, you can actually see orbs in a camera (eg. through a viewfinder) while taking photos or filming with a video camera. If you look for them with your naked eye at the time, you won't see them. This can happen with video cameras using a powerful illuminator (eg. low light or infrared) or when the flash fires while using a DSLR. This is to be expected as orbs are purely photographic artifacts. Generally, the human eye has a very different depth of field to a camera so it will rarely see out of focus dust, even when strongly illuminated.





When orbs show up in video, they often drift around and appear and disappear. This appearance and disappearance depends on how they drift in and out of the





Q:If orbs are caused by dust or insects, why don't you get photos of orbs mixed with dust or insects?




A:: With insects, you do but it isn't easy! It is possible, with a little patience, to produce a photo of a swarm of insects where some are orbs and others in-focus insects. Here is an example.





For more info on this experiment, see

Dust particles are, of course, much smaller than insects. It is more difficult (though not impossible - see next question) to get photos of mixed dust and orb swarms. Dust, because of its size, needs to be much closer to the camera to form orbs. Because of their small size, individual dust particles virtually never appear in photos, except as orbs when strongly illuminated by a flash unit.



here.
Q: How can a camera pick up dust that I can't see with my eyes?
A: Ordinarily dust is far too small and dim to show up in a photo, which is why we don't see dust in most pictures (or see it with the naked eye). However, when brightly illuminated and close to the lens, it can show up. When caught be a flash and slightly out of focus they appear as orbs.

In this photo you can see dust in focus (ie. not as an orb) above a powerful torch. No flash was used. This demonstrates that normal consumer cameras can indeed photograph dust in certain special circumstances. For more details, see

Q: Dust orbs are supposed to be small (no bigger than about 10% of the frame size). I've taken photos of larger orbs!A: Dust orbs, which are circles of confusion, cannot exceed a certain size because, as they become larger they spread out so much that they are no longer visible. When people report larger orbs than this, it usually turn out to be

Q: I've seen the same orb twice. I've also seen some orbs with faces! How can these be dust?
A: Remember that orbs are not actually the dust itself but
circles of confusion, or blur disks, caused by the dust. Only the fainter, larger orbs (caused by dust closer to the lens) have apparent patterns or 'structure' within them. In brighter, smaller orbs such 'structure' is too fine to be made out and is, in any case, drowned out by the brightness of the orb.

Understanding Boke, testing bokeh, Bokeh.
Usually circles of confusion are small and in the distance, so people don’t worry about them too much. Having them big and in the foreground, as with orbs, makes people notice them. The ‘detail’ or 'structure' within a circle of confusion is very sensitive to any slight physical deviations from the ‘perfect’ lens. These include chromatic and spherical aberrations and even fingerprints or dust on the lens. Cheaper lenses will, typically, produce more ‘detail’ than more expensive ones.

The precise appearance of the circles of confusion depends primarily on the exact shape and layout of the lens elements in your camera (camera 'lenses' actually consist of several separate lenses). Thus, it will vary not only from model to model, but even with individual camera to camera. For instance, a fingerprint on a camera lens could affect the 'structure' of your orbs! Dust physically ON the lens (as opposed to the dust floating in front of it causing the orbs themselves!) frequently shows up as small circles within your orb. Try cleaning your camera lens and see how it affects the 'structure' of the orbs. Also, try taking photos of orbs with different cameras, at the same time and place, and compare the 'structure' of the orbs. If the orbs were really 'out there', and not just photographic artifacts, they should all look identical with any equipment and should not be affected by cleaning lenses.

Typical 'structure' seen in circles of confusion can include a bright outer ring, colour fringes around the edges (caused by chromatic aberration in the lens or refraction in rain drops), concentric rings, straight lines and various 'shapes' (like the small circles caused by dust ON the lens). Though the 'structure' depends on the lens, its exact appearance will depend on the size and brightness of the individual orb. Orbs of similar size and brightness in a single picture will all look much the same.

Effectively, the 'structure' you are looking at is 'optical noise'. As with any noise, patterns will sometimes be seen in the random shapes. Some may appear similar from shot to shot (giving the appearance that it is the 'same' orb). Others might show apparently recognisable patterns, like faces. People are particularly prone to seeing 'faces' in random shapes. You should clean the lens on your camera. It won't stop you getting orbs but they should no longer have 'faces'. Cleaning the lens will also stop you seeing the 'same' orb again (because the 'structure' will change!).
The subject of 'bokeh', which examines the appearance of circles of confusion is poorly documented. Here are some links that might be useful:

Interestingly, if the orb was actually a glowing ball of light, rather than dust reflecting the flash, you would never expect it to have 'features' at all. Instead, it would always appear bright, uniform and featureless, due to over-exposure. Since it would be only a tiny feature in the photo, the camera would choose expose parameters for the overall scene, meaning it would inevitably overexpose the orb, completely destroying any possible 'features'. Indeed, it is a way of ruling out 'glowing objects' as a cause of orbs and the same argument would apply to grey and / or transparent orbs, particularly against a dark background.

Q: I have bought a camera with higher number of megapixels but I still get orbs. Surely this shows that orbs are real.

A: Unfortunately, various people have suggested natural theories for orbs which are

Since even the largest digital sensors (generally in DSLRs) are no bigger than a 35mm film frame, which can produce the occasional orb, then even top specification cameras are subject to one or two orbs in certain circumstances.




Q: Aren't single orbs paranormal? Don't dust orbs only appear in larger numbers?A: There is a popular idea that dust orbs come in groups, while single orbs must be paranormal. This myth may have started because people throw dust in front of their cameras, as a test, and get dozens or hundreds of orbs in one go. Of course, dust doesn't behave like that 'in the wild'. Dust particles float around on air currents and their distribution and concentration varies from minute to minute all the time. So, there is no reason why single orb couldn't easily be caused by a dust particle. However, single orbs are more likely to be caused by insects than dust. Some cameras don't produce dust orbs but DO produce insect orbs. Indeed, such




Q: The vast majority of orbs may be dust or insects but isn't there a tiny number that are unexplained?A: If the 'unexplained' orbs are exactly like the 'explained' ones, then it is logical to assume they also have the same explanation. If 1% of orbs are paranormal, why on earth should they 'imitate' the other 99% which are known to have natural causes? If gravity is the known cause of the downward flow of water in waterfalls, no one would speculate that there might be some other mechanism responsible in a tiny number of waterfalls somewhere in the world.




Q: If orbs are light bouncing off dust particles, shouldn't the large ones be brighter, as they must be closer to the camera flash? In fact, they are generally fainter!A: Larger orbs are indeed made by dust particles closer to the camera. However, they are out of focus! As you make objects go more out of focus with a lens, they produce bigger circles of confusion. These circles are also dimmer because the light is being spread over a wider area (the circle). This effect is stronger than the increase in brightness as a bit of dust gets closer to the camera flash. So, overall, larger orbs are fainter. Over a certain size, orbs vanish altogether which is why they don't exceed about 10% of the frame size.




Q: I can predict / control where orbs appear in photos meaning they must be paranormal.A: If this has only happened a few times, it is probably a coincidence. Try it many times to see. If it happens all or most of the time then you may be psychic. If you are psychic, either predicting or controlling the motion of orbs, it still does not make them paranormal. If the orbs are identical to all others then they are still likely to be out of focus bits of dust etc. If they look different to other orbs then they might represent another phenomenon entirely.




Q: How can you test if orbs are really paranormal?A: The orb zone theory has produced a number of questions for those who believe in a paranormal theory of orbs to answer. All of these questions can be easily answered by the orb zone theory. Any alternative paranormal theory must answer them satisfactorily too. They are:





  • why orbs are so much more common on (though not exclusive to) digital cameras than film cameras

  • why the vast majority of orbs are white or grey

  • why the number of orbs seen is affected by the depth of field of a camera lens

  • why you can take photos of orbs in front of backgrounds too close to be in focus

  • why some orbs are truncated on the edges of some photos

  • why orbs never exceed about one tenth of the frame size

  • why orbs are always in front of the many varied subjects in orb photos

  • why some cameras always produce odd-shaped orbs (such as diamond shape)

There are lots of other more things that would also need to be explained but explaining everything on this list would be a good start to a better theory.

For more on paranormal photos in general, see here.
single orbs are becoming more common.
simply wrong. Some people had the idea that there were fewer orbs with higher megapixel cameras. This may be true, in some cases, but it is to do with the physical size of the camera sensor which can be related to the megapixel numbers. Tests have shown, as the orb zone theory predicts, that simply changing the number of megapixels has no effect on the number of orbs recorded.
lens flare. This is an entirely different phenomenon, caused by reflections inside the camera from a bright light source in, or more frequently just outside, the frame of the photo. Look for clues like a line of 'orbs', fogging or bright light sources in or just out of the frame. You CAN, very rarely, get orbs larger than 10% of the frame size where a zoom (either optical or digital) is being used.
here. Note how the orbs are much larger than the insects that form them.
orb zone.

  • the depth of field of the lens (which is affected by manual zooming and automatic autofocus)

  • the distribution of dust, insects, rain etc in the area, which is effectively random

  • whether a flash is used and how long it goes on for (an automatic function of the camera)

  • how dark the background is

Most of these factors are either uncontrollable, or difficult to control, by the photographer. Therefore, it is difficult to predict exactly when orbs will appear. By sheer chance, orbs are bound to appear by coincidence occasionally at 'significant' times such as when something apparently paranormal is going on. See also
The crucial exposure parameters affecting orb numbers are those that alter the depth of field of the camera lens. These are: the focal length of the lens (altered by zooming in and out), the aperture (which controls the amount of light allowed through the lens to the sensor - f-stop) and the distance of the subject (ie. the thing you are focused on)*. In many digital cameras, particularly compacts, it is difficult or impossible for users to control these variables.


Some people deliberately capture orb photos by simply shooting flash pictures into a night scene, out of doors. This works well because the flash will go on for its
Q: Some people get orbs on many photos while others never get any. How is that explained?Q: I never get photos of orbs. How can I take some?
A: Some photographers gets lots of pictures of orbs because, whether consciously or not, they often take photos in conditions conducive to producing orbs. If people want, or expect, to get orb pictures they will discover, through trial and error, how to maximise their orb count. Here are some of the most important factors:
use a camera with a small physical sensor (so a small compact rather than a DSLR)
take photos in a dusty place or during rain (but protect your camera from water damage!)
choose a dark background (more orbs show up this way)
always use flash (you can get orbs without flash but it isn't easy)
make sure there is no nearby subject to reflect back the flash (this maximises the
flash duration)
So, the 'ideal' set up to produce lots of orbs would be taking flash pictures of nothing, outside on a dark, wet night. Just about any camera should produce orbs in that situation. If you get rain or water droplets on your camera lens you may also get photos with
weird glowing shapes.
Frequently Put Objections to a natural theory for orbs


Here are some typical objections to a natural theory of orbs. It's a sort of FRO - 'Frequently Raised Objections'. It's a bit like a FAQ really ...


Q: There was no dust or moisture present and I cleaned the camera lens so how could the orbs be dust? Q: The relative humidity was low, so it can't be moisture orbs!A: Dust is omnipresent**. Just look at a sunbeam shining through partly closed curtains in an otherwise darkened room, even one kept scrupulously clean. Dust is so ubiquitous that electronics manufacturers have to build special 'clean rooms' to stop it spoiling their semiconductor manufacture. Outside such very special situations, you will never exclude dust from places where photos are taken.


Dust on the lens is not the source of orbs so cleaning your camera will make no difference*. It is dust in the orb zone, a few centimetres in front of the lens, that appear as orbs.


Moisture in the air does not produce orbs, unless it forms a mist or falls as water droplets, such as rain. Unless relative humidity reaches 100%, water will not condense and form droplets, such as dew or mist. So measuring humidity is irrelevant to deciding if orbs are formed by water droplets.




* Dust on the lens CAN, however, affect the 'detail' seen in orbs even though it does not create the orbs themselves - see

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