A photo taken of the sun shining through has gone viral for appearing to resemble the famed Christ the Redeemer statue.
The photo was captured in San Salvador de Jujuy, Argentina.
People compared the image to the statue of Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Critics say that it’s merely just the sun shining through the crowd at an unusual angle while others doubted its veracity, saying it was Photoshopped.
The Christ the Redeemer statue is 125 feet tall, located on a rock near the city.
It’s not the first time that people have seen a photo resembling Jesus Christ in recent days.
In Italy, a photographer captured a similar photo of the sun shining through the clouds at sunset.
Even Rarer: ‘Crown Flash’
Years ago, a rare “crown flash” was captured on camera by a cyclist a few days ago, and he uploaded his findings on YouTube.“I was out riding my bicycle and a storm was approaching, then this strange light caught my eye so I pulled out my phone and shot this video,” the YouTube uploader writes. “After getting so many replies saying it wasn’t haarp (sic) I’m changing the name to, Crown Flash, a Crown Flash is when ice particles get aligned in the same direction from the electrostatic field created during a thunderstorm. It’s usually invisible to the naked eye but the way the sun hits it, it makes it visible to the naked eye kind of like a rainbow.”
Crown flashes are also known as “leaping sundogs.”
It reported, “ON July 2, 1970, at about 1945 h EST a thunderstorm cell passed a few miles north of Ann Arbor, Michigan. The column of cumulus cloud towered in the light of the setting Sun, far above the dark mass below, which occasionally flickered with lightning.”
It noted that due to the presence of readily available smartphones, there are now several examples of the rare phenomenon.