In a very frequently photographed place use lighting for less than 1/60th of a second every few seconds to expose or make appear an object. Only cameras will see the object this way. In one out of every 600 vacation photos in a particular spot: ET!
also useful for haunted houses.-- Voice, Oct 31 2010 More like 1/100th of a second. http://www.psych.ny...entation_intent.pdf [mouseposture, Nov 01 2010] But how are you going to mount a laser apparatus in the middle of the sky without it being visible?-- DIYMatt, Oct 31 2010 I didn't realise the sky had a middle.-- nineteenthly, Oct 31 2010 Its in between the top of the sky and the bottom of the sky, I presume.-- pocmloc, Oct 31 2010 There's often clouds in the way.-- daseva, Oct 31 2010 You could, instead, put it 'way up in the middle of the air.-- mouseposture, Oct 31 2010 Why will people not see things if they're only illuminated for less than 1/60th second? Flashes from flashguns are much shorter than that and they're visible.-- hippo, Nov 01 2010 There's a lot written about tachistoscopic presentation of subliminal visual images, but mostly in the psychoanalytic and marketing literature; not strong on technical detail. But I found a <link> that gives an actual figure for how short the stimulus presentation needs to be for people not to see it: seems to be about 10 msec.
Also, the trick probably only works if the image has about the same average brightness as what it replaces (c.f. [hippo]'s comment on flashguns) so you'd have to project *continuously* and tachistoscopically *replace* the image, rather than merely projecting tachistoscopically.-- mouseposture, Nov 01 2010 random, halfbakery