From Jari's archive of weird things - the very same that brought you the "Sky King, Sky King..."-nukular no-go message few years ago.
I'm sure that most of you have seen a photo or two that demonstrate some sort of purple artifacts on them. Often in the shape of vertical streaks, but I've also seen interlace-pattern type of artifact and some cases where there's no weird pattern at all - it's just that the highlights have taken on a purplish hue.
As far as I know, this is due to the sensor being overdriven, thanks to very bright source of UV, IR or visible light. ...I'm sure that someone can correct me on this, if I'm wrong... and specify what kind of emission it is, that the camera is sensitive to.
Anyway, I have something far cooler to show you. A camera with a built-in time machine. Or a variation of this artifact that I've never seen before.
Some background info first: following five frames are taken from a video which shows a 95mm recoilless rifle
(I used to shoot one of those myself
) firing. The 640x480 resolution is very weird for a video camera, plus IIRC the video had a frame rate of either 15 or 30 fps, whereas real PAL video should have 25 - this leads me to believe that it's captured with a digital still camera in video mode, instead of real
(digital or not) video camera. Of course, all this could be due to compression; the video is in .wmv-format.
Sadly I can't contact the author of the video anymore, so I could ask him about these things. And I've also archived the video to some DVD and can't find it right now, I took these screen grabs from it earlier.
I
swear that these frames are consecutive and in order. I have done nothing at all to them.
Observe.
Frame #1 You can see the weapon itself, crew, some shell casings in the foreground and the supervising officer
(dude in the red safety vest and helmet). Minor vertical purple streaking is visible - it looks like this is from the sun.
Frame #2 Nothing has happened - except some branches and leaves are very slightly moving
(in the wind, I believe). Yet there is massive artifact in the frame. Where does it come from?
Frame #3 Weapon fires, you can see the backblast venting from it, and rather impressive puff of smoke on the front side, too. To give you some idea about how impressive it is in real life; the sounds is 208dB loud, equaling heavy artillery piece. The crew is wearing double hearing protectors, and the pressure shock has been known to knock pictures of walls a mile away from the shooting range.
There's about 5 pounds of propellant in each round, and the projectile weights more than that, IIRC. Muzzle velocity is a tiny bit over 700m/s, which should give you some impression about the power.
Frame #4 Observe the leafs and branches. See the pressure shock hitting them?
Frame #5 And due to human reaction time, the cameraman reacts now, and jerks the camera little bit.
That's one shot. The video has several, and
each of them exhibit the same pattern; a massive artifact due to what looks like a sensor being overdriven in the frame
previous to each shot. And even more uncannily - at the end of the video there are two shots where the camera is pointed at the target, with the RR behind it
(and thus nowhere near the frame)... and guess what. The artifact is
still there. The projectiles have a tiny tracer embedded into their ass, so that you can see where you shoot, but the artifact shows up
before the projectile is in the frame.
So... why does the artifact show up
before the shot?
Regardless of what kind of emission it is, I'm pretty certain that it can't beat the speed of light.

So, it should hit the sensor at the same time with the regular light.
The sensor itself... can it react faster to some forms of emission than to others? This doesn't sound very plausible to me, since digital camera sensors can capture visible light with exposures as short as 1/8000 s.
Maybe it's a feature of the compression codec? Some kind of video equivalent for the pre-echo sometimes heard in recordings made with the early versions of aac and vqf-codecs? Note to people who are not familiar with this; pre-echo is exactly what it sounds like; an artifact you hear
before the real sound - a temporal distortion caused by the codec.
Any thoughts? Ever seen anything like that? Perhaps it's just a glitch in the Matrix?