Investigating the Alleged Ghost Photo

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In summary, the person claims that they took a photo of a ghost with their new phone, and that the photo appears to be real. However, they do not believe that it was faked by the photographer.
  • #1
Ivan Seeking
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I was sent this photo of an alleged ghost. The story is that this is the first photo taken with a new cell phone. Is this some kind of inside joke or something? I don't suppose someone with the cell phone company is having a little fun? Could it be an error of some kind that allowed a preprogrammed photo to get mixed with a live shot?

The person swears this is real and he still has the original photo in memory. He is willing to turn the phone over for testing. My understanding is that it is possible to show that the data has not been manipulated. Is this correct?

I was sent a high-resolution bmp file. Below is the jpg. I was going to attach the bmp file but it appears to be too large. Do we see any evidence of fraud? My understanding is that this person has no specific knowledge of electronics or photo imaging techniques, so unless this is a pretty easy trick to pull, I tend to doubt this was faked by him. More likely someone has pulled a trick on him, I would think.

http://img832.imageshack.us/img832/5179/ghostt.jpg [Broken]
 
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  • #2
Remember the news a couple of years ago of the brand new iphone that had a picture of a chinese factory worker on it?

This looks like a reflection of a person standing in a doorway, or standing in front of a window. Notice the rectangle they're standing in? Would a "ghost" come along with a fixture behind them?

I get some very bizarre shots from my digital camera, the demonic rabbit, the mysterious "fog", snowflakes in my living room, ghostly apparitions (which turned out to be my reflection in a window) which made it look like someone was floating on my patio.
 
  • #3
I am highly confident that there is no one around who looks like that - I know the source of this one through a family member. So it would have to be something already in the camera, or a photo superimposed on a real image, or simple trick photography.
 
  • #4
Ivan Seeking said:
I am highly confident that there is no one around who looks like that - I know the source of this one through a family member. So it would have to be something already in the camera, or a photo superimposed on a real image, or simple trick photography.
Considering that the image is of an Asian and I'll bet my fruit bat that the phone was made in an asian country, the image was already in the camera.
 
  • #5
Evo said:
Considering that the image is of an Asian and I'll bet my fruit bat that the phone was made in an asian country, the image was already in the camera.

Yes, my first impression was Native American, but after a closer look, she looks more Chinese than anything.

What seems to be a door frame in the lower part of the photo, seems to follow her outline as you approach her head, so I wasn't sure what to think about that.
 
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  • #6
Don't ask me how it happened though. Of course, the camera coming from China, it's a chinese ghost.

Why would a ghost be standing in a rectangle? And why is part of the face blocking out the wheel, and part is not?
 
  • #7
Evo said:
Don't ask me how it happened though. Of course, the camera coming from China, it's a chinese ghost.

Why would a ghost be standing in a rectangle? And why is part of the face blocking out the wheel, and part is not?

I don't think it is actually a rectangle... it just looks that way in the lower part of the photo.

Usually there is a dead giveaway in photos like this. I didn't see anything familiar here.
 
  • #8
Is this the full image? Could it just have been a double exposure from what was on the TV screen?
 
  • #9
You are seeing the entire image. It was resized for the forum. The bitmap is 1600 x 1200.
 
  • #11
I called to ask what was on the television. Allegedly the child seen in the photo was watching a cartoon - Sprout.

Someone had already thought to ask about that.
 
  • #13
If you want to see weird, I was video conferencing with Kurdt when all of a sudden black wisps started circling around his head. This continued for a couple of minutes then stopped.

I snapped a still photo of the wisps.

Sorry, this might detract from your thread, i was just showing that digital cameras capture some weird stuff. You can delete it if you want.
 

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  • #14
did anyone look real close at the face on the "ghost" image? It does not look happy to me. It looks ... anyone else with thoughts on that?
 
  • #15
Lacy33 said:
did anyone look real close at the face on the "ghost" image? It does not look happy to me. It looks ... anyone else with thoughts on that?
It looks faked, see how the wheel frames the face? The "face" blots out the wheel then suddenly is transparent again. Amazing how the facial features conveniently blot out the wheel, but no other part of her picture does.
 
  • #16
Lacy33 said:
did anyone look real close at the face on the "ghost" image? It does not look happy to me. It looks ... anyone else with thoughts on that?

Yes, it looks strange and disconcerting - the eyes more than anything.
 
  • #17
alt said:
Yes, it looks strange and disconcerting - the eyes more than anything.
She has bags under her eyes, she looks tired.

Ivan, ask your friend to e-mail the actual photo to you directly from their phone, then post it here. It's called picture mail, their phone can do it. That way we can see what is on the phone and not an uploaded picture.
 
  • #18
You could also say it looks as though she (?) is emerging from the wheel - coming foward through it, and that the part of her face visible has emerged while the rest hasn't. That is of course, if you believed in ghosts.

I find the wheel / face interphase, one of the most interesting things.
 
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  • #19
Evo said:
She has bags under her eyes, she looks tired.

Ivan, ask your friend to e-mail the actual photo to you directly from their phone, then post it here. It's called picture mail, their phone can do it. That way we can see what is on the phone and not an uploaded picture.

Her eyes to me, looked puffed up both under and over. And such effects can be caused from things different to mere tiredness.

I do not believe in ghosts. OTOH, this is one of the more interesting photos I've seen, and it's worthwhile deconstructing it point by point - if possible.
 
  • #20
I downloaded and looked at this in Photoshop. The image I got is 1600 x 1200 pixels. Do cell phone cameras have resolutions that high? Maybe they do. I haven't been keeping up with cell phone technology. There is a very well defined line just above the woman's head that separates the image of the woman from the background. You have to zoom into see it. This could have been a result of one image being cropped out of another.

As for the likeness of the woman, I think she looks native American or native Alaskan. Her right eye appears to be bruised and her face just under her left eye appears to be swollen.
 
  • #21
Evo said:
She has bags under her eyes, she looks tired.

Ivan, ask your friend to e-mail the actual photo to you directly from their phone, then post it here. It's called picture mail, their phone can do it. That way we can see what is on the phone and not an uploaded picture.

Okay, I contacted the young man directly and had him email the photo from his phone. It came in as a 251 KB jpg. Below is a link to the unmodified upload.
http://yfrog.com/5mghostcamera100728175542j

The original bmp was 5.49 MB [uploaded from his camera to a pc].

One correction: This was about the 20th photo taken with the phone, not the first. Also, the zoom feature was being tested.

If you look closely, even the face does not completely obscure the wheel.
 
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  • #22
That's pretty weird, Ivan. I was googling around trying to see if I could find something that explained how double exposures could occur on a digital photograph. I found nothing except instructions for how to create the effect with image editing software. The only similar thing I have seen to that was when a batch of my digital image files got corrupted and had bright green lines running through them. (nothing interesting, just boring horizontal lines).
 
  • #23
Could the photo be downloaded, modified, and uploaded again from a pc to the phone? If so, would it be possible to show that happened?

I found out that the bright spot above her head is a reflection from the sun. The weird art thing on the wall has a chromed backplate. The sun can also be seen reflecting off baby's bald little head. :biggrin: I am going to drop by tomorrow to see the living space and cell phone.

Note that the reflection from the sun would seem to rule out any possibility that the image is also a reflection; say from a sheet of glass positioned at the proper angle to reflect the image of someone behind the photographer.

This kid is such an unlikely candidate for a hoaxer [assuming that this isn't now an easy trick!] that this has caught interest - that and some oddities about the photo. He and his wife are very young and live in a very small house, maybe 800 sq feet, tucked away in a lower-middle-class neighborhood. He loves buying nice toys but isn't a tech guru by any means. He works in a completely non-technical trade.

Btw, he doesn't believe in ghosts. He is an agnostic on that point. At a glance, the only reasonable explanation seems to be a software glitch, but that doesn't look like something that would be preloaded on a cell phone. So again I have to wonder about a hoax at the factory level, but that doesn't seem possible. Any residual data should have been lost when the new data replaced it, right? That seems to leave a software trick as the best explanation.
 
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  • #24
I doubt jpg is the original one. Every jpg picture has some information saved in the header, at least it contains information about the camera used. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EXIF. That's from the picture taken with my Nokia 6300:

Code:
Make - Nokia
Model - 6300
Orientation - Top left
XResolution - 72
YResolution - 72
ResolutionUnit - Inch
Software - V 07.21
YCbCrPositioning - Centered
ExifOffset - 157
ExifVersion - 0220
ComponentsConfiguration - YCbCr
FlashPixVersion - 0100
ColorSpace - sRGB
ExifImageWidth - 1200
ExifImageHeight - 1600

Thumbnail: - 
Compression - 6 (JPG)
XResolution - 72
YResolution - 72
ResolutionUnit - Inch
JpegIFOffset - 329
JpegIFByteCount - 5281

Nothing like that in the picture you linked to, which MAY suggest that it was modified.

Could be EXIF was stripped by the imageshack. Could be its a practical joke.
 
  • #25
Ivan Seeking said:
I found out that the bright spot above her head is a reflection from the sun. The weird art thing on the wall has a chromed backplate.
Yeah, that is indeed a weird art thing. About as weird as the ghost image.
Sometimes reflections can occur in the camera lens, especially with bright points of light. Would it be possible for the image to be on the art thing, projected to the camera by the sunlight, and then reflected/refracted internally by the camera lens?

If it is not a hoax you could also try and reproduce the effect by taking the same picture using the same camera at the same time of day (position of the sun).
 
  • #26
Odd that it really looks like a standard double exposure. Maybe its the ghost of Kodachrome coming back.
 
  • #27
So again I have to wonder about a hoax at the factory level, but that doesn't seem possible. Any residual data should have been lost when the new data replaced it, right? That seems to leave a software trick as the best explanation.

That would be my thought. You'd think that the sun reflection would certainly wipe out any previous image.
 
  • #28
Looks like a fake or forged - Could be an anomaly of the digital camera software and the owner of the camera believes that it is a "real ghost".
 
  • #29
Noja888 said:
Looks like a fake or forged - Could be an anomaly of the digital camera software and the owner of the camera believes that it is a "real ghost".

Please explain how this would happen.

No one ever said the owner thinks it is a ghost - though it was implied in the title and opening sentence. I specifically stated that he doesn't believe in ghosts. There are other people who got pretty excited about this.
 
  • #30
Borek, I can attach the phone mail jpg directly. Does that help?

Interesting, the original is 251KB, but the upload reduces it to 112KB. I need to check the upload limit.

Edit: We are good to 300 KB but limited to 1280x1024
 

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  • ghost_Camera_10-07-28 17-55-42.jpg
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  • #31
Borek said:
I doubt jpg is the original one. Every jpg picture has some information saved in the header, at least it contains information about the camera used. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EXIF. That's from the picture taken with my Nokia 6300:

Code:
Make - Nokia
Model - 6300
Orientation - Top left
XResolution - 72
YResolution - 72
ResolutionUnit - Inch
Software - V 07.21
YCbCrPositioning - Centered
ExifOffset - 157
ExifVersion - 0220
ComponentsConfiguration - YCbCr
FlashPixVersion - 0100
ColorSpace - sRGB
ExifImageWidth - 1200
ExifImageHeight - 1600

Thumbnail: - 
Compression - 6 (JPG)
XResolution - 72
YResolution - 72
ResolutionUnit - Inch
JpegIFOffset - 329
JpegIFByteCount - 5281

Nothing like that in the picture you linked to, which MAY suggest that it was modified.

Could be EXIF was stripped by the imageshack. Could be its a practical joke.


Uploading to imageshack or as an attachment to the forum will likely strip all the header info.

Ivan, you can view the basic information by simply looking at the info of the files (on windows I think this is rightclick-properties on the file icon).
 
  • #32
cristo said:
Uploading to imageshack or as an attachment to the forum will likely strip all the header info.

Ivan, you can view the basic information by simply looking at the info of the files (on windows I think this is rightclick-properties on the file icon).

I had checked and found the basic summary: Pixel count, dpi, bit depth, frame count. I also see origin: Author. But nothing as detailed as what Borek posted; no camera indicated. I do see that information for some of my own photos.

Would cell phone photos necessarily contain this information?
 
  • #33
Ivan Seeking said:
Would cell phone photos necessarily contain this information?

I would think so. I just emailed myself and image I'd taken on my phone, opened it, and it contained all the information Borek mentioned.
 
  • #34
I would expect at least phone model, after all, they want this information to be spread out.
 
  • #35
I was also able to confirm that it is possible to upload to and receive images on the phone [I hadn't thought about receiving a photo on the phone, only uploading. Obviously it could have been sent from another source].

I guess the most specific piece of information needed is if it can be determined whether a photo is an original, or if it has been stored in memory from another source.

I'll have him send me several pictures when we talk - while I'm sitting there - including one that I see taken. That might be enough to show there has been foul play.
 
<h2>1. What is the process of investigating a ghost photo?</h2><p>The process of investigating a ghost photo involves careful analysis and examination of the photo itself, as well as gathering background information about the location and circumstances in which the photo was taken. This may also include interviewing witnesses and conducting research on any potential paranormal activity in the area.</p><h2>2. How can you determine if a ghost photo is real or fake?</h2><p>There is no definitive way to determine if a ghost photo is real or fake. However, some factors that may indicate a photo is fake include obvious manipulation or editing, lack of credible witnesses or evidence, and a lack of consistency with other paranormal evidence in the area.</p><h2>3. What equipment is used in investigating a ghost photo?</h2><p>Common equipment used in investigating a ghost photo includes cameras, EMF meters, thermal cameras, and audio recorders. These tools can help capture potential evidence and detect any unusual activity in the area.</p><h2>4. Are there any scientific explanations for ghost photos?</h2><p>While there is no scientific evidence for the existence of ghosts, there are several potential explanations for ghost photos. These include pareidolia (seeing familiar patterns in random images), camera malfunctions, and natural phenomena such as reflections or shadows.</p><h2>5. Can a ghost photo ever be considered as concrete evidence of paranormal activity?</h2><p>As a scientist, it is important to approach all evidence with skepticism and to rely on empirical data. While a ghost photo may be intriguing, it cannot be considered as concrete evidence of paranormal activity without further investigation and corroboration with other evidence.</p>

1. What is the process of investigating a ghost photo?

The process of investigating a ghost photo involves careful analysis and examination of the photo itself, as well as gathering background information about the location and circumstances in which the photo was taken. This may also include interviewing witnesses and conducting research on any potential paranormal activity in the area.

2. How can you determine if a ghost photo is real or fake?

There is no definitive way to determine if a ghost photo is real or fake. However, some factors that may indicate a photo is fake include obvious manipulation or editing, lack of credible witnesses or evidence, and a lack of consistency with other paranormal evidence in the area.

3. What equipment is used in investigating a ghost photo?

Common equipment used in investigating a ghost photo includes cameras, EMF meters, thermal cameras, and audio recorders. These tools can help capture potential evidence and detect any unusual activity in the area.

4. Are there any scientific explanations for ghost photos?

While there is no scientific evidence for the existence of ghosts, there are several potential explanations for ghost photos. These include pareidolia (seeing familiar patterns in random images), camera malfunctions, and natural phenomena such as reflections or shadows.

5. Can a ghost photo ever be considered as concrete evidence of paranormal activity?

As a scientist, it is important to approach all evidence with skepticism and to rely on empirical data. While a ghost photo may be intriguing, it cannot be considered as concrete evidence of paranormal activity without further investigation and corroboration with other evidence.

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