(05-26-2023, 03:09 AM)A51Watcher2 Wrote:Okay I have spoken with the team.(05-26-2023, 03:04 AM)Ninurta Wrote: I don't know what process you used to enhance the images, and I won't ask because I gather that some of your processes are proprietary, but if you analyze those processes, it may be possible to determine what material or energy wavelength is being highlighted to show up as the banding or contours, and from that, after figuring the material or wavelength causing the banding, it should be possible to determine what process or energy is at work, based on the material it is concentrating in the bands, shouldn't it?
Yes much of the software we use is NDA military grade.
So while we cannot reveal the name of the software, we are allowed to describe it's purpose and we always do so before each phase is displayed.
The answer is none of us are scientists or astrophysicists so we do not know.
The process used on these images do not provide an answer either.
The software used on the black hole is called the Deuem shades of black.
'Professor' Deuem heads up the Asian division of the team and this software is not NDA
I described this process to BIAD several months ago since he was the only imaging specialist I knew here at the time.
It is a scientific process meaning that other people can reproduce the results the of this for themselves and have done so.
It is very simple - there are shades of black just like there are shades of grey.
In the digital world all primary colors are divided into 256 shades.
So shade 256 of black is the darkest black you can get.
Here is an image made with mostly all pixels of shade 256 of black with some text written in shade 255 -
Now I opened that image in a paint program and wrote some text on it in black shade 255 instead of 256, and see if you can read the text. You cannot because they are invisible (or hidden) to the human eye and it remains to look like a total black image.
If I wrote some more text in black shade 254 it would still remain hidden from the human eye. 253, 252 etc. all remain hidden until quite a few numbers down from that.
So one way to reveal hidden pixels in an image is to use the color replacer function in your photo or paint program.Just drag your mouse across an image and it will display the digital value of the pixel you are on.
Let's say you have an image that is of a dark sky at night with a white dot in the sky. As you drag your mouse across it you will see most values are 256 but as you approach the white area you begin to notice some 255s and 254s. So you place your mouse over a 255 pixel and tell your replacer function to replace all 255 pixels in this image to red, then do the same for all the 254s. Then continue to replace all hidden pixels in the image with a bright color to alert us there is a hidden pixel in this location.
Now then doing this manually can be time consuming, so Deuem created a program that does this automatically.
He discovered interesting results from photos of those huge parking lot lights and high voltage equipment. He tried it on UFO photos for several years with no results until he met me on a forum where I was posting clips of my footage taken at Area 51.
He came racing back to the forum and PM'd me and yelled "HOLY SHIT MAN YOU GOT A REAL UFO THERE"
I just laffed and said yeah I know I was there.
He showed me the results but I didn't really understand what I was seeing.
To me it just looked like some kind of Psychedelic mish mash of colors.
He then explained the shades of black process to me and I began to understand what we were seeing.
All of the images above were created with the Deuem process.
I will give you a few examples of Deuem processing on my A51 footage -
This was taken on Mailbox road during the Alien craft test flights when a Cammo dude came driving by me and spotted me filming the craft.
For a moment one of the craft became visible in the frame so we froze the frame and zoomed in, and applied the Deuem process. This is the first one he ever did and was so freaked out about because his software had never done anything like this before -
and here are some further examples examples of the Deuem process on single frames of my footage -
So in studying these images, the first question that seemed easiest to answer was what are those red cloud thingy's under the craft.