Movie 13 (:40)
Script : At high
speeds, extreme intensity effects occur, with most parts of the
scene too dark or bright to see.
Aberration concentrates
photons in front and spreads them out behind, so ahead looks bright
and behind looks dim.
Time dilation means
the shutter of a moving camera is open longer - collecting more
light and making the image brighter.
This effect means that moving light sources concentrate along
their direction of motion - front and back lights are equal when
stationary.
Accelerating without
computer correction, relativity effects swiftly overtake us. The
scene changes colour and becomes very bright or too dark to make
out. At high velocity, the camera is hit by a beam of high energy
radiation.