point at the other. The fissure had been blown up by the zoom process so that it almost completely filled the screen. Even with all the magnification, the quality of the infrared image was superb. Inside the opening three or four different colors could be seen; however, only two, the brown and the red, were continuous over a significant number of pixels
'Holy shit,' said Carol, involuntarily rising from her seat and walking over to join Dale, 'that brown thing must be the lost missile. It was underneath us all the time. ' She picked up the pointer and waved it at the screen. 'But what's this red area? It looks like the Cheshire cat from Alice in Wonderland.'
'I'm not absolutely certain,' Dale replied, 'and it's probably not anything of major significance. But I do have a crazy idea. Actually it's based on what you told me about the strange behavior of the whales down there. It may be the head of another whale, back away from the light, looking out of the cave. Or whatever the opening is. Here, look at this. By zooming out a little we obtain one single picture that shows both of the red isothermal regions. Look how the red region in the middle of the fissure and the red from your sentinel whales look the same. Even with additional stretching, the two regions remain comparable in temperature. Not a proof of any kind, but it certainly supports my proposition.'
Carol's mind was racing ahead. She was already planning her next move. It was essential that she retrieve that missile before anybody knew it was there. She needed to return to Key West as soon as possible. She picked up her purse and her briefcase. 'Can someone drive me to the airport, please, Dale? Right now. I want to call that Lieutenant Todd again and scare him a bit. You know, make him a little more cautious and buy some time for us.'
She paused, thinking of a million things at once. 'But I can't call him from here without making him suspicious ... And I must make some arrangements for a boat for tomorrow ... Oh, incidentally, I assume you have hard copy of those pictures available for me.'
Dale nodded his head. 'I do,' he said. 'But first sit down and relax for a second. I want to show you something else. I don't yet know if it's a real phenomenon, but if it is ...' Carol started to protest but there was something in his manner that told her to acquiesce. She sat down. He launched into a discussion of enhancement algorithms, explaining how the information in pictures could be stretched to highlight special features and allow easier interpretation.
'Okay, Okay,' she said at length. 'The bottom line is what I need. I know already how clever you and your engineers are.'
Dale put the first infrared image back on the screen, the one that showed the full view of the three whales underneath the boat. 'This picture does not have much thermal granularity. Every pixel in the region colored red, for example, does not correspond to exactly the same temperature. In reality, the spread in temperatures for the same color is roughly five degrees. Now if we stretch the image, and make the isothermal regions only cover a total spread of two degrees each, we obtain this picture.'
In the new image there were ten different colors. It was much harder to see individual features, and spurious data points made the picture extremely difficult to interpret. A portion of the front of one of the whales was now a different color from the rest of the animal.
'The limit of accuracy of the equipment, by the time the raw spectral data is converted to temperatures, is about one degree. If we show another stretch of the same picture, with the connected isothermal regions now only covering a total range of one degree each, then the picture almost becomes gibberish. Now there are twenty different colors for the isothermal regions and, because the noise or error in each data point is of the same magnitude as the spread in the isothermal region, it is virtually impossible to see the figures of known objects like the three whales. I tell you all this up front to make certain you realize that what I am about to show you may be completely wrong. It is, nevertheless, absolutely fascinating.'
The next image projected on the screen was a close-up down on the floor of