Comments by "Stephen Villano" (@spvillano) on "Joe Scott" channel.

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  12. I've always saw IR illuminators well. Not as in using them as a flashlight, but the source I can see well at a distance. I suspect it's just part of the range of normal red wavelengths that many can see, as they're not exceptionally far from our usual wavelengths discussed in usual conversation. But, UV, long wave UV is quite bright to my eyes, a deeper shade of violet, fluorescent marking, such as counterfeit detection on US currency is also blindingly bright under a long wave illuminator. UVB, I see in a pinkish-purplish tone. Neither being well focused at all, one actually appearing quite foggy, suggesting something a biologist I discussed it with suspected, fluorescence of proteins downconverting the UV into ranges that I can detect. No clue what UV-C looks like, you explore it, I'll stay at home. That's damned near x-ray wavelength and quite unhealthy for humans. Oh, seeing in x-ray and gamma would be even more interesting during powerful thunderstorms. Regular strength thunderstorms are fair x-ray sources, strong storms are good enough gamma sources as to be detectable easily from orbit. I did get to see my femur in gamma, when I had a thyroid scan using I-131. Before dosing, they needed to determine my natural background level. I'm slightly hotter than those junior to me by decades, but given I was born a week after Tsar Bomba and the idiotic amount of atmospheric bursts, plus underground bursts that leaked fallout to the surface in the US, not surprising. Oddly, I don't turn green or get larger when angry. But, there were a few Privates that were certain that if angered, I'd likely beat them with the 20 ton APC they had to clean after using it... ;) Naw, they'd just have found themselves with all kinds of things to do that they'd loathe while everyone else was chilling with ice cold beers.
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