Wednesday, October 6, 2010

All About: Paranormal Investigators


LOCK by 826 PARANORMAL

Paranormal Investigation Gear Essentials

The voice recorder is a very important tool in ghost hunting equipment. The recorder gives you the ability to capture audio, and when your luck, a chance to catch a EVP. These kinds of audio anomalies commonly known as electronic voice phenomenon are some of the most substantial ghost and spirit evidencethere is. Although some will contend that they're nothing greater than other people within the groups talking, paranormal investigators and those you need to do the EVP work will contend that audio sessions are performed during a extremely professional manner, and all of team members are accounted for during audio work. Most of these groups may have one individual perform the talking with a shut up period throughout the group.


Introduction

It bothers me when people dance around something they want to find out empirically and never engage it experimentally. For example, in all the discussion on the web I've read about paranormal "investigators" going out and taking pictures of all these "orbs" and things, but I never see any effort to pin down the nature of this phenomenon.

For instance, try different levels of light, take pictures in places that less likely to be "haunted," etc. If you vary the conditions experimentally, you can determine the nature of the phenomenon. I think there most likely is something interesting going on in many of the pictures I have seen, but I have yet to hear convincing evidence that they are, in fact, a supernatural phenomenon.

An experimental approach

As a first step toward addressing these larger questions, here are a number of smaller details that have never been adequately (read: experimentally) posed. In some cases I propose specific studies where they aren't clearly implied by the question itself.

* Quantification: Average numbers of orbs, their size in the frame (expressed as a percentage), and frequency of appearance (# of pictures/total pictures taken) with attention paid to various conditions (time, temperature, humidity, etc.)

* Are orbs ever obscured by other objects in the frame? Experiment: Fill the room with "branched" (as opposed to "blocked") objects that will act as something as a forest rather than a Euclidean volume.

* Do orbs ever interact with objects in the room? (e.g., do they travel around and/or through furniture, walls, etc.?)

* What would be seen in photos taken simultaneously from virtually the same place? Note: The cameras should be placed as closely together as possible so as to avoid a parallax view and/or missing dust and/or orbs at close proximity.

* What would be seen in photos taken simultaneously from two angles?

* Is there a consistent range of their rate of motion? Experiment: requires knowledge of absolute size or actual position in at least a 2D plane.

* What is the absolute size of an orb? Is this variable? Experiment: Take two photos simultaneously from opposite sides of the room with the opposing photographers in the other's picture. The scale relative to the photographers from two perspectives will narrow the possible sizes. (e.g., if orb appears the same size in both photos, then it is halfway in-between; therefore its distance from the photographer is known and the size of the orb can be extrapolated from the size of the photographer in the image.

* Two cameras shooting at the same time should see them. Similarly, it would be unlikely that only *one* camera of two would see orbs without the other seeing the same. If only one does, it is likely that the effect is caused within the camera.

* Do orbs turn up less frequently when photos are taken at close range to the wall? I.e., with less volume of space photographed, do the number of orbs observed diminish proportionately (on average)? To use an analogy, if you look out into a ballroom, you see lots of people. When you turn to the wall, there are fewer people in front of you because the floor space is reduced.

* Relating to photographic focus: Do orbs vary in appearance with changes in focus, f-stops, or even fogging of the lens? (I have a shot in which many of them appear in focus even when they appear in a photo that is out of focus. Conversely, I believe I have a photo in which an apparent orb was obscured by moisture on the lens.)

* Do they show up when no flash is used? Experiment: Take multiple shots w/o flash. Alternate with a flash (and perhaps vary the intensity of the flash as well) to determine if light is required.

* Can the side-by-side presence of orbs be demonstrated in the same frame as identifiable dust? Experiment: Isolate dust to one half of the frame with a large pane of glass or a wall. Stir the dust on one side (or room) and photograph.

The crux of the paranormal issue

Is there any indication that orbs are associated with ghosts? Compare quantifications in "haunted" locations with randomly sampled photos taken elsewhere. Problem: So-called "investigators" go to places where "hauntings" are suspected, but those are the only places where they conduct investigations. Suppose this is a more ubiquitous phenomenon. If you only look in "haunted" places, that's all you'll associate this with. On the other hand, why am I finding them beneath the ground in urban areas where no deaths/burials would have occurred? Control samples are required.

Personally, I haven't seen a good association between the supernatural and the orb phenomenon. That's the most tenuous of connections for me. I see orbs in many of the photos I've taken, but they aren't strictly relegated to "haunted" locales.

I really haven't spent a lot of time on paranormal web sites largely because they tend to be populated by kooks and pranksters... always a bad combination. One group supplies dubious "evidence" that reaffirms the otherwise unsubstantiated beliefs of the rest... thereby creating a larger audience eager for more images that are often (and perhaps always) fakes. It's a dangerously reiterative process.

That is a voice recorder and a camera. The camera doesn't have to be a digital version, but could be a 35mm, but I would recommend if you're using a 35mm film to use 400 speed or higher. The advantage of a digital is the amount of pictures, with the addition of a SD card, could be stored on your camera. And in case you have the available screen in your camera to review pictures, this gives you ability to review some of your pictures right at that moment on the investigation. Granted it could be difficult to find anomalies on this small screen, but you might be able to determine mysterious objects, to which you'll be able to debunk right at that moment.

 

These two types of equipment are very important and also the basics of the ghost hunting gear. You might put a easy and inexpensive tool to use for discovering potential ghosts, they are commonly called Dowsing rods. You may be able to pick-up a decent set of these for about 5 bucks or of up to $ 60. These are great in case you can't afford to buy a EMF detector, or a digital thermometer. .

{What Do You Need to Hunt Ghosts?

Many people feel that they'll need a lot of expensive ghost hunting equipment to visit ghost caught on camera. That's not true. Yes, obtaining costly high tech ghost hunting gear might improve your chances of capturing some historical ghostly evidence, but ghost hunting can be completed with few devices.

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