Which gives a whole new perception to the video, we aren't witnessing the light go through the bottle, we're witnessing the visual of the light going through the bottle after the light has already passed through the bottle. That means that even at that crazy camera speed, light is so fast that the camera can't see the light until it's already through the bottle! So if the camera is say, 3 bottle lengths away from the bottle, it would take 3 times the amount of time it takes the beam to cross the bottle (in the camera playback) for the camera to actually see the beam. If this is true, that means that however long it takes the beam to travel the distance of the bottle, it would take the light bouncing out of the bottle that long to travel that far, in any direction. Neat definition: A neat place, thing, or person is tidy and smart, and has everything in the correct. Well, the way we can actually see the beam, is that the light bounces out of the bottle towards the camera, giving us a visual of the beam. The combination of the sharpening and noise filter makes such an effect possible. In addition, Neat Video can make video look sharper without any degradation of quality. Neat Video detects, analyzes, and reduces noise. At the speed of the camera, it takes several seconds for the beam to go through the bottle, at the speed of light. Neat Video Demo plug-in for After Effects (32-bit) Neat Video is a filter designed to reduce noise and grain in digital video. However, my mind has come up with a solution, albeit a mind boggling one. The author is arguing that we wouldn't be able to see the laser beam going through the bottle. Neat Video Plug-in for Premiere (Mac) is a video noise reduction plug-in designed to reduce noise and grain in digital video sequences produced by digital video cameras, camcorders, TV-tuners. It mentions that we don't see light by casting our vision at it, we perceive light as it goes into our eyes. This is the article that got me wondering.