The word Orb is from the Latin word "orbis"
meaning circle or round object. An orb captured by a camera is
described as being a sphere of light which is believed by some
to be the simplest form of a ghost manifestation. Below is just
a few examples of orbs captured by members of Swadlincote
Paranormal during investigations.

The first orbs starting appearing after
the invention of CCD and CMOS lenses used in Digital cameras
which sceptics believe is the cause of dust and water appearing
on photographs. Presenters of the TV show Most Haunted suggested
that orbs they had captured during their investigations could be
linked with the paranormal and as thus with the explosion of
paranormal investigation teams ever since the interest in orbs
exploded too. Even sceptical researchers like myself were once
impressed by the sighting of an orb but that is simply because
we did not understand what actually caused them so we chose
paranormal activity as our logical answer.
There are generally believed to be 3 types
of orbs. Solid orbs which are created by dust or pollen, Liquid
orbs which are created by water vapour and then Spirit orbs
which are believed to be a product of paranormal activity. The
aim of this experiment is to learn more about each type of orb
to give us all a better understanding of how they are created,
how to distinguish one from the other and to find out how
credible each theory really is.
The experiment was conducted in 5 phases;
Phase I - To attempt to
re-create liquid orbs using basic camera equipment and water as
the anomaly without focusing too much on conducting the
experiment under test conditions. The primary goal is to simply
ascertain whether orbs can be re-created and how their
appearance changes at varying distances.
Conducted: October 05th 2007 -
Outdoors
Equpiment: Tripod, Digital
Camera, Measuring markers spaced out approximately 10cm apart
and water.
Using the digital camera set
on a tripod, I took a picture with the flash fired at the same
time that water was sprayed from a bottle. I took 2 pictures at
each marker in case of an error in timing.
Most of the images appeared
blatantly as propelled water as demonstrated in the image below.

- Water vapour sprayed at a distance of approximately
48cm from the camera lens.
But as the water was sprayed further away
we got some more interesting results including this one below
estimated to be 72cm away from the lens.

This is very alike the sort
of orb that is often captured on a paranormal investigation. It
appears to be very grainy and spotty in appearance and it's edge
is surrounded by a blurry haze created by chromatic aberration.
 |
Chromatic
aberration, which appears on some images as a blurry
haze of colour surrounding an object, is created
when a lens has a different refractive index for
different wavelengths of light.
It appears like this because each
colour of the spectrum can not be focused at a
single point on the optical axis.
Astronomers get round this
problem by using extremely long telescopes which
increases the focal length of the lens thus reducing
chromatic aberration. |
Two days later, this time with the help of
Steve I conducted phase II of the experiment.
Phase II - To recreate
Phase I except this time the test will be carried out under test
conditions. The water must be released into the atmosphere at
distances increasing by an extra 10cm away from the lens each
time. This must also be repeated without the flash being fired
on the camera at all. This should also be carried out in
daylight and in darkness.
|
The aim is to ascertain the optimum distance for which
orbs begin to appear on photos and also to examine how
the results vary without the use of a flash. |
The
equipment was the same as in Phase I but this time the markers
were spaced apart more accurately and we ensured that the wind
was blowing away from the camera so that we knew the minimum
distance of the water vapour.
 |
Left: Example of the
equipment when set up. The camera is in a fixed position
with orange-tipped markers spaced out 10cm apart. The
pole is held at a right-angle to the yellow measuring
tape as a guide line for where to fire the water spray. |
This time the results were not identical
to those of Phase I. The picture below was the first picture
taken with water being sprayed just 10cm from the lens.

This shows that the classic
liquid orb can be seen when the droplets are 10cm away from the
lens, and possibly even closer. The single orb captured in the
first phase was fired at 72cm however it could have been the
remains of a previous photograph and much closer to the lens
then was first thought.
The next few pictures would
also suggest this is correct.
 |
40cm - Whilst the water
droplets are still very apparent they don't appear as
the large spotted orb as seen at 10cm. |
 |
80cm - As before the
water droplets are still very apparent but the smallest
droplets are no longer visible at this distance and the
larger ones still do not appear as orbs. |
 |
120cm - As before with
fewer droplets visible at this distance and still no
orbs. |
 |
160cm - Only one or two
water droplets are visible and still no orbs. |
 |
200cm - Even the
droplets the size of raindrops are barely visible and
would not be seen at all unless blown up to full size on
a computer screen. |
From this
test it has become apparent that only the water droplets close
to the lens appear as the large orb as seen in the photograph in
Phase I. The same test was carried out again but this time
without the use of the flash and not a single orb was captured.
This was also tried indoors.

The first
picture is taken with the flash fired, the second picture which
was taken with the flash turned off does not show a single orb
despite several attempts.
Due to the
reflective properties of water this is the result I expected for
this test.
So far from
these tests we can conclude that water droplets in the air can
appear as orbs when they are very close, within about 40cm of
the lens. Although this distance is only an estimate due to the
lack of scientific credibility these tests provide. Also these
orbs will only appear in a photograph when the flash has been
fired.
The orbs
themselves are spotted in appearance which leads some people to
believe that the patterns they form are the faces of the
deceased person the orb is in connection with. They also often
have a coloured haze which is created by chromatic aberration.
This
experiment continues with tests conducted in daytime and with a
variety of cameras including an infra-red night vision camera as
used on paranormal investigations. We will also be attempting to
re-create solid orbs and comparing them in appearance and
behaviour to the liquid orbs. Keep your eye on the website for
Part 2.
- Report by Richard O'Connor
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