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Easy Explanation below 👇

Most digital cameras don't take the entire picture at the same instant. They actually shoot the picture line by line, with the top line of the image captured first and the bottom line of the picture captured last.

In this case, the camera was held sideways, so one side of the image was taken slightly before the other side.

The bird's wings flap pretty fast, so by the time the camera got to the other side of the image, the bird's wings had traveled from the "up" position (on the right) to the "down" position (on the left), allowing the camera to capture this seemingly impossible image.

What we’re referring to is shutter speed. It’s the length of time that the digital sensor is exposed to light. It can be sped up or slowed down manually. It’s also known as exposure time on a film camera.

A faster speed, up to 1/1000 sec would be used for stuff like sports or slower exposures for blurry shots, like the ones you see with stars and traffic.
Forwarded from Tech On Air (Tech On Air)
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At first glance, it looks like a particularly crap piece of clip art. But the accompanying explanation is enough to make you scratch your head.

This image was captured back in June, 1998 and was recorded from a mine in Japan and scientists needed 500 days’ worth of data to produce it.

The picture is of the sun, but it was taken *THROUGH* the Earth using elementary particles known as neutrinos. They are a fundamental piece of matter able to pass through the Earth without interacting with any other particle.
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SETI astronomers decline the news that this signal is from any alien technology. Let me tell you why and with the best source.

Actually, many news agencies like 'The Guardian', big space pages on Instagram and almost everywhere this news is trending that we just received a possible alien signal from a nearby star Proxima Centauri and they claimed @setiinstitute is giving it a green light. But is it true, no it is not correct on the scientific bases.

Seti wrote on their website that:

The signal apparently varies slightly in frequency, wobbling up and down the radio dial. So it’s not coming from an antenna bolted to the ground here on Earth. That immediately makes it non-terrestrial by definition, but still doesn’t certify it as alien.

So, what can it be:

Well I can give you 4 simple explanations as scientists are still verifying its origin.

1) It can be from our thousands of satellites.

2) It can be from something yawning beyond Proxima Centauri. (Behind this star system maybe there is something like a pulsar or quasar, chances are there but this signal doesn't match with these much but it can be.)

3) It can be from a gas giant like Jupiter in that star system which we haven't discovered yet and it is must be really big to send signals from there to Earth, well scientists are analyzing similar signals coming from Jupiter from decades so, it can be.)

4) Maybe it is really local like somebody cooking his lunch in a microwave. Yes, it has happened before and it can be again. 😂
2025/07/01 16:03:18
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