JHC - these are imaging system artifacts. Only that.
There is never a month when I do not find some utter crap on Youtube coming from a complete idiot.
The problem with high tech is that any fool can use it without knowing what the hell they are doing. I maintain we are still cavemen, only with shiny magic phones.
I never knew what to make of this, but I did observe once that 100%-normie and NASA fanboy youtuber "Smarter Every Day" once incidentally noticed something similar to Crow777's "lunar wave" while trying to get a particular landscape photo with a large moon in it. He asked his audience "what's that line on the moon?" that he captured in a still image, because he couldn't figure it out. I think he made a reddit post about it or something. I looked to see if he ever resolved it but didn't find any obvious update. This was a while ago now, so maybe he mentioned it again since. I haven't watched a video of his in a couple of years.
I've seen it before, not saying the camera is malfunctioning or anything. Looks like it has to do with the refresh rate. I'd think you'd be able to capture the effect on other things, but I doubt they're trying.
In the video he thought it was refresh rate as well until he noticed that he pans in the video. The wave follows a speed irrespective of the video panning. If it was some sort of tearing from refresh rate, then that tear or bulge would follow with the frame of the camera.
JHC - these are imaging system artifacts. Only that. There is never a month when I do not find some utter crap on Youtube coming from a complete idiot.
The problem with high tech is that any fool can use it without knowing what the hell they are doing. I maintain we are still cavemen, only with shiny magic phones.
Semi transparent luminary
atmospheric distortion
I never knew what to make of this, but I did observe once that 100%-normie and NASA fanboy youtuber "Smarter Every Day" once incidentally noticed something similar to Crow777's "lunar wave" while trying to get a particular landscape photo with a large moon in it. He asked his audience "what's that line on the moon?" that he captured in a still image, because he couldn't figure it out. I think he made a reddit post about it or something. I looked to see if he ever resolved it but didn't find any obvious update. This was a while ago now, so maybe he mentioned it again since. I haven't watched a video of his in a couple of years.
Looks like it has to do with the camera. How often do you see this
I've seen it before, not saying the camera is malfunctioning or anything. Looks like it has to do with the refresh rate. I'd think you'd be able to capture the effect on other things, but I doubt they're trying.
In the video he thought it was refresh rate as well until he noticed that he pans in the video. The wave follows a speed irrespective of the video panning. If it was some sort of tearing from refresh rate, then that tear or bulge would follow with the frame of the camera.