- Joined
- Aug 11, 2014
- Messages
- 49
- Reaction score
- 2
You, my friend, have fallen prey to the same illusion that has perplexed people for ages:
False perspective.
I'm going to blow your mind: Rather than those objects moving at 1400km/h or whatever speed you've calculated, those objects are NOT MOVING.
That's right: they're motionless (or close to it). What you're seeing are bird feathers, bits of dust, or some other very light piece of debris that is floating in the air, and your Phantom zoomed past them, giving you the false perspective that they were moving.
More fully:
You've perceived that they are far away (hundreds of meters, passing withing a few to a few dozen meters of your Phantom), large (perhaps 10-30cm across) and very fast moving. Instead, consider that they are close (a few meters away at most, passing within mere centimeters of your camera lens), small (a centimeter or less across) and not moving... but instead hanging relatively motionless in the air, as your Phantom passes by them.
Bear in mind that your Phantom is moving at perhaps 5-10 meters per second. The very close proximity of the object to the camera means that when your Phantom passes something stationary that close, the object appears to be FLYING past at incredible speeds.
My guess is you've filmed some bird feathers floating in the sky.
False perspective.
I'm going to blow your mind: Rather than those objects moving at 1400km/h or whatever speed you've calculated, those objects are NOT MOVING.
That's right: they're motionless (or close to it). What you're seeing are bird feathers, bits of dust, or some other very light piece of debris that is floating in the air, and your Phantom zoomed past them, giving you the false perspective that they were moving.
More fully:
You've perceived that they are far away (hundreds of meters, passing withing a few to a few dozen meters of your Phantom), large (perhaps 10-30cm across) and very fast moving. Instead, consider that they are close (a few meters away at most, passing within mere centimeters of your camera lens), small (a centimeter or less across) and not moving... but instead hanging relatively motionless in the air, as your Phantom passes by them.
Bear in mind that your Phantom is moving at perhaps 5-10 meters per second. The very close proximity of the object to the camera means that when your Phantom passes something stationary that close, the object appears to be FLYING past at incredible speeds.
My guess is you've filmed some bird feathers floating in the sky.
