In the comics Gordon and Co shined the Bat Signal on both low hanging clouds and the sides of tall buildings.
Well there was always the red phone…
I believe you, because I`ve seen this too. Is it holographic technology? How to they get the lazer to appear to hit a surface when all there is is sky?
Weve asked this here before but I don
t think a good answer was put forth, imagine that…
The text accompanying the other photo is:
(my bolding) So it wasn’t just sky, they were lucky enough to have the right kind of cloud cover.
Sorry, I meant no offense; my reasons for treating it with skepticism were:
-The rays leading to it appear completely parallel, rather than appearing from a point source.
-It seems to just ‘stop’ in mid-air; I would expect a little bit of penetration behind the main image.
The thing just looks like it was done in photoshop or something.
But you’re probably right; the rest of the photos on their site look fine - I suppose they just got lucky with the conditions for the logo shot - presumably my reservations are answered by very dense cloud and that we are only shown a very short section of the rays.
Not good enough for me though.
Ive seen lazer light shows where different lazers seemed to stop at different points in the sky. If they were using the same cloud bank they would all seem to stop at the same point. Plus the AA logo seems too flat to be using a cloud bank for a "stop". Also, I
m sure the lazer light shows Ive seen were not always done on a night were there was a conveniently low particle concentration. How would they have formed the AA logo if there wasn
t ANY particle concentration in the lower atmosphere that night?
Im with **mangetout**, you
d think there would be penetration of lazer light beyond the image…
Light penetration would partly depend on the color of the laser. Some frequencies penetrate haze and mist better than others.
The cut-out piece of metal you put in front of the spotlight to project a pattern is is called a “gobo”. It works quite a bit better than construction paper. A small spot can put a surprisingly well defined image on a quite distant surface.
See, working on the lighting of the high school musical wasn’t completely worthless!