Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Human body luminescence: collier photography

Human body luminescence: collier photography

Collier, a scientist in the former Soviet Union, used high-frequency electric field photography to photograph the colorful glow around some people's bodies. This kind of light is wonderful: it can change color with people's position and mood. Usually the arms are turquoise and the hips are olive. When people are angry, the blush will deepen and turn red, when they are scared, it will turn blue and white, and when they are drunk, it will turn pale. What's even more amazing is that when these luminous people touch the fingertips of men and women, the light of women's fingertips will stretch forward, while the light of men's fingertips will shrink backwards.

Korotkov, a professor at St. Petersburg State University of Information Technology, has been working for many years to invent a special instrument to record "human light". He developed an instrument called gas discharge visual black box. The working principle of this black box is quite simple, just sending short electrical pulses to people's fingers. Electrical pulses activate photons and electrons, and instruments capture them, and then form images on computer monitors. The human hand is a very sensitive organ, and there are many areas on the finger that are related to various systems of the human body. The task of experts is to interpret images and tell the relationship between light and the function of specific parts of the human body. If a person is energetic and healthy, his light is bright and even. If the light is dim and incoherent, it is a sign of inflammation in the body.