Kirlian photography

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Kirlian photograph of two coins

Kirlian photography refers to a form of photogram made with electricity. It is named after Semyon Kirlian, who in 1939 accidentally discovered that if an object on a photographic plate is connected to a source of voltage an image is produced on the photographic plate.[1]

Kirlian's work, from 1939 onward, involved an independent rediscovery of a phenomenon and technique variously called "electrography", "electrophotography" and "corona discharge photography." The Kirlian technique is contact photography, in which the subject is in direct contact with a film placed upon a charged metal plate.

The underlying physics (which makes xerographic copying possible) was explored as early as 1777 by Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (see Lichtenberg figures). Later workers in the field included Nikola Tesla; various other individuals explored the effect in the later 19th and early 20th centuries.

Kirlian said that the image he was studying might be compared with the human aura. An experiment in evidence of energy fields generated by living entities involves taking Kirlian contact photographs of a picked leaf at set periods, its gradual withering corresponding with a decline in the strength of the aura. In some experiments, if a section of a leaf was torn away after the first photograph, a faint image of the missing section would remain when a second photograph was taken. The Archives of American Art Journal of the Smithsonian Institution published a leading article with reproductions of images of this phenomenon.[specify] James Randi has suggested that this effect was due to contamination of the glass plates, which were reused for both the "before" and "after" photographs.[2]

Contents

[edit] Research

Kirlian photo of a leaf

In addition to living material, inanimate objects such as coins will also produce images on the film in a Kirlian photograph setup. In the United States, Dr. Thelma Moss of UCLA devoted much time and energy to the study of Kirlian photography when she led the parapsychology laboratory there in the 1970s. [3]

Also, in the 1970s psychologist Joe H. Slate Ph.D. led research at Athens State University under the United States Army Aviation and Missile Command as project "Kirlian Photography" (Featured in the History Channel's Vampire Secrets).

Current research continues by Dr. Konstantin Korotkov[4] in the Russian University, St. Petersburg State Technical University of Informational Technologies, Mechanics and Optics. Dr. Korotkov has published several books.[5] He uses GDV (Gas Discharge Visualization) based on the Kirlian Effect. GDV instruments use glass electrodes to create a pulsed electrical field excitation (called "perturbation technique") to measure electro-photonic glow.[6]

The Korotkov methods are used in some hospitals and athletic training programs in Russia and elsewhere as preventive measurements for detecting stress. The Russian Academy of Science[7] has approved the GDV techniques and equipment in 1999 for general clinical use,[6][unreliable source?] though some forms of this approval, according to the certificates Dr. Korotkov himself shows in various web sites covers conformity with general electrical safety (standards 61010 and 61326).[8]

There has been extensive published research in peer-reviewed scientific journals regarding GDV and related material, including several articles in the Journal of Applied Physics and in IEEE articles.[9]

[edit] Explanations

Kirlian photo of a fingertip
Kirlian photo of two fingertips
Kirlian photo of a leaf
Kirlian photo of two coins

Outside of the standard explanations for the phenomena there is the possibility that the images produced may be caused by a voltage corona effect, similar to those seen from other high voltage sources such as the Van de Graaff generator or Tesla coil. In a darkened room, this is visible as a faint glow but, in this case, the film is affected in a slightly different way. Color photographic film is calibrated to faithfully produce colors when exposed to normal light. The corona discharge could have a somewhat different effect on the different layers of dye used to accomplish this result, resulting in various colors depending on the local intensity of the discharge.[10]

[edit] In popular culture

  • The concert programme from David Bowie's 1976 Station to Station tour featured some results of the technique, and in 1975 Bowie claimed to have achieved markedly different results, using his fingertip and his crucifix, before and after he took cocaine.[11] The David Bowie album Earthling and the single "Little Wonder" used the images Bowie created as part of their cover and interior artwork.
  • Science fiction author Piers Anthony wrote a series of five books (Cluster, Chaining the Lady, Kirlian Quest, Thousandstar and Viscous Circle) based on the premise of Kirlian transfer, the idea that a person's identity resides in his or her Kirlian aura and can be transferred to a host, in effect transferring the individual into another body, thus allowing the main character to traverse galaxies and "be" a variety of aliens during the course of a single book.
  • In the movie Omen IV: The Awakening, Delia's babysitter, Jo, takes Delia to a psychic carnival where she and Delia had their picture taken with a Kirlian camera.
  • In the Old World of Darkness book Project Twilight, Kirlian photography is one of the methods available to government vampire hunters to detect ghosts, spirits, and auras. In the New World of Darkness book Hunter: The Vigil, Kirlian photographic equipment is used by some hunters to investigate supernatural phenomena.
  • In Margaret Atwood's speculative dystopian novel, Oryx and Crake (2002), scientists engineer "Kirilian energy-sensing algae" that is capable of detecting human emotions.[12]
  • In the X-Files season 4 episode "Leonard Betts", Kirlian photography was used to photograph the decapitated head, revealing the faint aura of a man's shoulders.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Julie McCarron-Benson in Skeptical - a Handbook of Pseudoscience and the Paranormal, ed Donald Laycock, David Vernon, Colin Groves, Simon Brown, Imagecraft, Canberra, 1989, ISBN 0-7316-5794-2, p11
  2. ^ "Kirlian photography". An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural. James Randi Educational Foundation. http://www.randi.org/encyclopedia/Kirlian%20photography.html. Retrieved 2008-10-14. , derived from:
    *Randi, James (1997). An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0312151195. 
  3. ^ Thelma Moss, The Body Electric, New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher Inc., 1979.
  4. ^ http://www.korotkov.org/
  5. ^ Including "Human Energy Field: study with GDV bioelectrography" 2002, NY, Backbone Publishing Co. and "Light After Life: Experiments and Ideas on After-Death Changes of Kirlian Pictures" 1998, NY, Backbone Publishing Co.
  6. ^ a b http://kirlianresearch.com/
  7. ^ http://www.kirlian.org/kirlian/korotov/korotkov.htm
  8. ^ See Russian certificates [1], and European certificate [2]. (The European certificate may be purchased at Berlin CERT [3] with no formal requirements of actual testing.
  9. ^ http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1467731&isnumber=31475
  10. ^ David G. Boyers and William A. Tiller (1973). "Corona discharge photography". Journal of Applied Physics 44 (7): 3102–3112. doi:10.1063/1.1662715. 
  11. ^ Images reproduced at; http://www.buzzfeed.com/twentyfourbit/david-bowies-kirlian-photo-before-and-after-1wab
  12. ^ Atwood, Margaret. Oryx and Crake. 1st. New York: Anchor Books, 2004 p. 201

[edit] External links

Coronal Discharge Imaging Devices

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