The ship is floating in the void, this is the first time!
December 6, 2023
International Desk: It is normal for a ship or any boat to run on water. But if it doesn't move in water and floats in the void, then anyone's eyes will go wide. And such a strange scene was seen by a man named David Morris. However, he did not forget to record the incident immediately.
Looking out to sea from a village near Falmouth in Cornwall, England, he saw a huge tanker floating on the water.
But the matter is nothing but science. This is an example of the optical illusion known to us as the superior mirage. This type of illusion occurs frequently in the arctic region. This rare mirage can also be seen in British winters.
How it happens: This type of illusion is mainly due to weather conditions. Scientists call this temperature inversion. When a temperature inversion occurs, warmer air is over cooler air. It causes damage to our eyesight. Just then such hallucinations occur.
Cold air was blowing over the cold ocean, and warm air was blowing over it. Because cold air is denser than warm air, it bends light entering the eye of a person standing on land or shore, causing many distant objects to appear differently.
Superior mirages can create a variety of images, meteorologist David Brine said. Here a distant ship is seen floating above its original position. Sometimes an object below the horizon can also be visible.
December 6, 2023
International Desk: It is normal for a ship or any boat to run on water. But if it doesn't move in water and floats in the void, then anyone's eyes will go wide. And such a strange scene was seen by a man named David Morris. However, he did not forget to record the incident immediately.
Looking out to sea from a village near Falmouth in Cornwall, England, he saw a huge tanker floating on the water.
But the matter is nothing but science. This is an example of the optical illusion known to us as the superior mirage. This type of illusion occurs frequently in the arctic region. This rare mirage can also be seen in British winters.
How it happens: This type of illusion is mainly due to weather conditions. Scientists call this temperature inversion. When a temperature inversion occurs, warmer air is over cooler air. It causes damage to our eyesight. Just then such hallucinations occur.
Cold air was blowing over the cold ocean, and warm air was blowing over it. Because cold air is denser than warm air, it bends light entering the eye of a person standing on land or shore, causing many distant objects to appear differently.
Superior mirages can create a variety of images, meteorologist David Brine said. Here a distant ship is seen floating above its original position. Sometimes an object below the horizon can also be visible.
11 months ago