So what we have below Images are on Stephen Jones blog). is a body structure being being encoded 3 dimensionally onto the cloth with varying degrees of intensity. (whew, I hope someone can help me out here hehe). I believe that image is of a 2 dimensional photo taken of the shroud passed through the vp-8 image analyzer, which was used to analyze 3 dimensional topographical terrain on the mars and the moon.
Now we are getting to the freaky part folks. As Jackson showed that images formed by direct contact have high resolution, but lack gradient of intensity, and images formed by diffusion or attenuated radiation (not sure what attenuated radiation is, so any help would be gladly appreciated lol. So with the shroud it has the high resolution from direct contact, but it also has a strong gradient intensity. This is only the tip of the iceberg as to why most , if not all natural explanations fall far short of explaining this .C. Physical Significance of Image Structure on the Shroud
Once it is recognized that the Shroud image was generated from a real human body, a particular set of questions may be asked which otherwise would not be posed if one were to assume that this image was produced in an artist's studio. Immediately, we recognize that the image must have been generated by some principle whereby body structure became encoded into varying shades of intensity on the cloth. The three [330] dimensional brightness surface of Figure 2 makes this point most graphically. If such a mechanism were not operative that could, in effect, convert cloth-body distance to corresponding shades of image intensity, then the computer generated brightness surface would not appear as a physiologically reasonable body shape.
Obviously, this has occurred to produce the Shroud image, but this conclusion brings forth certain problems. First, how could a physical mechanism act through the space between a body and cloth without blurring anatomical structures that are smaller than the projection distance, e. g., in the region of the lips? In a set of experiments I showed that images formed by direct contact exhibit high resolution, but lack gradation of intensity. On the other hand, images formed by diffusion or attenuated radiation from a body surface to an enveloping cloth contain shading gradations that correlate more or less with cloth-body distance, but suffer significantly in resolution. Yet, the Shroud image displays [331] simultaneously both a shading correlation with cloth-body distance and reasonably sharp focus.
Ill post on the other parts of the article in the coming days.
This should be enough to keep us all busy for a few days