Apparently, people from the subtle world are not at all cold burial entities, as many believe. According to Connecticut ghost hunters, they were able to prove that phantoms are composed of very warm energy that can be easily detected using infrared thermography. The footage below was captured a few days ago by American paranormal specialist Dan Norvell and his team at Maple Cemetery in Hartford County.
Researchers arrived there at night, armed with a thermal imager, and after about an hour and a half captured a mysterious anomaly. A device showing the distribution of temperature fields unexpectedly caught a strange anthropomorphic figure in the depths of the cemetery, slowly moving, or rather, floating above the ground and disappearing behind one of the gravestones of the churchyard. The experts were very puzzled and excited by such a find, but they resorted to logic and put forward a theory that it could be about some kind of animal or person.
The ghostbusters decided to recreate the events of that night. They returned a couple of days later to the cemetery and stood at the same point, and one of them went to where the alleged phantom was. To the surprise of our heroes, a living person was seen from afar on the screen of the thermal imager very poorly. Therefore, the Americans concluded that ghosts (at least some of them) generate much more heat than any of us living …