Over on aulis.net, there area few articles where the author is a PHD in Physics.
I doubt that. Aulis has been notorious for more than 20 years for hosting or relying upon mostly-anonymous experts whose credentials either cannot be determined, or which can be determined to be false or irrelevant. If the author wishes us to take him seriously as an expert, he will need to provide the customary substantiation of his qualifications.
Further, "physics" is a vast field. If the author wishes us to accept a doctoral degree in physics as qualification to perform photogrammetric rectification on a photograph as a means of testing the authenticity of photographs, he will need to show specific evidence of adjudicated research or other expertise in that narrow field. I do not accept claims to a PhD in physics as simply an assurance that the author is a very smart person who has probably got the right answer, regardless of subject. Photogrammetric rectification is not a subject taught to physics students at any level. It is a practical skill one must learn aside from that, proficiency in which must be separately demonstrated.
http://aulis.com/raytracing_as11.htm
The method here is generally correct. But the author provides no error analysis to determined how precisely he can locate critical points on the shadows in the photograph. Instead he attributes all error in the result to a question of authenticity. This is entirely unscientific.
http://www.aulis.com/raytracing.htm
The method here is incorrect.
In some ways it's the usual ""shadows are not parallel", but in other ways it's very technical and well thought out.
No, not really. The standard for "well thought out" in the sense of coming from a physics professor is the ability to provide the appropriate scientific controls, which here are completely absent. It's just "shadows are not parallel" with a whole lot of dazzling math thrown in to make the audience think the author is well-qualified. The author may have the degree he purports, but there is little if any scientific rigor in the two papers. This is probably why he has elected to publish them in a venue where they will probably not be examined closely or questioned.
I am posting it here to see if I can get some help teasing out the problems in the paper.
I intend no offense, but it's my opinion that asking us to supply you with arguments for a debate you are having with someone else, whom you forbid us to contact directly, is improper.