I agree with Mike, it's a double rainbow. I can see the start of it on the left and the finish on the right on my monitor.
The visible prism effect appears at that angle. In other words, if you set up a shot to take in the full arc of a rainbow centered in the frame, the sun will be directly behind you. If you center one end or the other of a rainbow in the frame at sunrise/sunset, then the sun would be coming over your shoulder at an angle of 40-42 degrees.
Bottom line is that in this shot, the full arc of the prism effect is centered on the center of the frame while the sun was at nearly a right angle. Not atmospheric. At the risk of further confusing the issue, here's a diagram that explains it.
It cannot be a rainbow. To catch both sides of a rainbow (never mind a double rainbow), you need a lens with the angle of view more than 84 degrees. That is anything wider than 24 mm on a full frame. We've got 55 mm on a crop sensor.
Edit: cross posting, Dan have already explained it with a diagram. Indeed, apart from the lens being telephoto, the sun is not behind the camera but on the left hand side. So definitely not a rainbow
Last edited by dem; 24th January 2016 at 05:09 PM.
Hi Dan,
It looks tae me like an artifact caused by extraneous light on the sensor edge. Didye use a lens hood? In particular conditions, ye see banding like this on some digital cameras. Extreme contrast, excess exposure comp are also causes.
Didye get carried away lifting shadows? That can be as bad as flare and veiling (which is what this problem resembles).
If it was the glass, ye'd have noticed it before now and it would be noticeable tae a greater/lesser degree, on many more shots. Ah think it's PP.
A rainbow? Naaah...
Nah, ye don't...To catch both sides of a rainbow (never mind a double rainbow),. That is anything wider than 24 mm on a full frame. We've got 55 mm on a crop sensor.you need a lens with the angle of view more than 84 degrees
Canon Ixus L-1 APS, 26MM/F2.8 (FF equiv - 34mm) But yer correct dem...not a rainbow...
I did have the hood on but it is indeed very high contrast.
No shadow lifting. The opposite as a matter of fact. PP doesn't create something like this. It may enhance it, make it more visible. But the underlying issue has to be there to be enhanced. I've not shot more than a couple of dozen frames with this lens since I got it. This was some extreme lighting. But I shoot this kind of stuff a good bit and have never seen this happen.Didye get carried away lifting shadows? That can be as bad as flare and veiling (which is what this problem resembles).
If it was the glass, ye'd have noticed it before now and it would be noticeable tae a greater/lesser degree, on many more shots. Ah think it's PP. ...
The 84 degree angle only occurs with the sun right on the horizon when the full semi-circle of the refraction cone shows up. The higher the sun is above the horizon, the less of the circle show up and the narrower the angle is. In this shot only a fraction of the circle of the rainbow is visible so the angle was clearly much less.
I just 'Sony a6000 rainbow artifact' without the quotes in Duckduckgo. The fifth hit was this: http://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3905765. Note that the lens is different, which suggests that if this is an artifact, the body is the issue. I didn't search further.
It is possible if you are above ground level. Which I was when I took the photo. Our house is about 1500ft up the mountainside. But as already discussed, you can only see the full circle of a rainbow if the sun is directly behind you.
Thanks for that link, Dan. It looks like the same phenomenon discussed in the thread. And with different glass. Well that's even worse news if it is something inherent to the body. There was a good bit of discussion regarding the vignette correction. I believe they meant in-camera. It definitely warrants further investigation. Well this will keep me busy for a while.
Dan
Check www.atoptics.com. You might find your answer there.
Ilmari
Sorry wrote false address www.atoptics.co.uk is the correct one