Lunar eclipses appear as shadows on the moon and when full the coloration of the moon dulls, allowing it to take on orange or reddish hues. There has long been suspicion that the solar bodies are merely projections, and that it may be possible with the right equipment to see the projection sources.
If you photograph images with the sun in view, you will often see small circles of light with a transparent quality that will move with a geometric pattern as you pan the camera around the sun. These are considered as lens flare.
Using a "ferrocell" a devise consisting of two non-magnifying lens taped together with a thin layer of "ferrofluid" (ferromagnetic particles suspended in carrier fluid), appears to have the capacity to produce some visual anomalies when it is attached to the lens of a camera.
For the video, I use a ferrocell placed in front of Cleveland Paranormal modified HD DVC. A red reflection of the moon appears and moves as I adjust the lens. When perfectly lined up in front of the camera lens, this red reflection snaps to a specific orientation and distance from the moon. Interestingly, as I later aligned the combination of my camera and ferrocell to a spotter scope, the red orb anomaly persisted through the spotter scope and increased in apparent size along with the moon.
I don't know if the magnetic properties of the ferrocell lens are bringing out a visual anomaly that always existed but was invisible to us. This would support "electric universe" theory, if it is a significant revealing anomaly, and not a technically explainable lens flare type of anomaly.
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