What looks like a “structured craft” in this FLIR footage is likely a known sensor blooming artifact, not the object’s actual shape

What looks like a “structured craft” in this FLIR footage is likely a known sensor blooming artifact, not the object’s actual shape
People keep treating this frame like it’s the literal silhouette of some impossible craft, but what you’re seeing is very likely a known optical artifact from the FLIR system itself. The “cross” or “orb-with-spikes” shape is consistent with a saturation/blooming effect that happens when an extremely bright heat source is centered in-frame on certain infrared targeting cameras. Because the polarity of the feed is inverted, hotter objects appear darker instead of brighter, so the glare artifact shows up as a black geometric form instead of a glowing white one. A few things that support this interpretation: -The shape stays aligned with the camera system rather than behaving like a structured craft would -Similar FLIR bloom artifacts can be reproduced with bright aircraft exhaust, stars, and even streetlights in some systems -The apparent “arms” resemble diffraction/sensor blooming patterns rather than physical surfaces -The object’s actual body may only be a tiny bright point buried inside the saturated image -When tracking systems sharpen contrast aggressively, artifacts become even more dramatic The inversion detail matters a lot too. In white-hot mode, hot objects appear white. In black-hot mode, they appear dark. Flip the polarity and suddenly a flare artifact looks like a matte-black alien geometry hovering in the sky. Video: https://youtu.be/I8QTl9zG6eg?si=Swz4ajTEJLzl8h1z submitted by /u/Worst_Artist [link] [comments]