Only very low quality lenses produce lens flare that is the same color as the source. The flare is caused by internal reflections, which are off of antireflection coatings. Such coatings are highly wavelength dependent, and in fact usually reflect shorter wavelengths. That's why camera lenses normally appear green, blue, or violet. This lens appears to have good quality AR coatings, so only a tiny fraction of the moonlight is internally reflected- nowhere near enough to saturate to white.DerekSmith wrote:Undoubtedly, that lens open as it is on F4 is flaring quite badly from the moonlight, you can see the huge flare halo and its numerous flare spikes radiating out from the moons light source. But they are all WHITE - as they should be for a white source. However, this single spike is green and almost identical in hue and intensity to the aurora.
The fact that the flare is the same color as the aurora can be explained by the fact that both are showing a nearly monochromatic green. Color cameras generally have problems with monochromatic sources, since they often stimulate only one pixel- in this case the green ones. As a result, two different colors of green can't be distinguished from each other.
You can't tell how the orientation changes, because the pictures have been cropped. But to a good first approximation, the flare points towards the optical axis of the lens (the center of the image) in both cases, just as would be expected.I do not think this can be explained away as lens flare, and as its orientation is different in a subsequent shot, yet it is still present, indicates that it is real, but as yet unidentified.