> Some cameras with slower sensors suffer from the rolling shutter effect where fast moving subjects get distorted because the subject or the camera is moving. Think e.g. lampposts looking diagonal when shot from a fast moving car.
These days this is the least of your worries with a camera with rolling shutter. I got a Nikon Z-fc, knowing from the reviews that it would have a rolling shutter, because I don't mind these types of distortions.
What the reviews didn't mention is that many LED based lights actually alternate red, green and blue LEDs in quick succession. And you see that in photos as horizontal streaks of rapid changes in white balance. This also happens with projectors that are LED based, and CFTs if their drivers aren't fast enough.
Are you sure that's an artifact of the light source emitting colors sequentially, and not an artifact of the camera sensor detecting colors sequentially?
These days this is the least of your worries with a camera with rolling shutter. I got a Nikon Z-fc, knowing from the reviews that it would have a rolling shutter, because I don't mind these types of distortions.
What the reviews didn't mention is that many LED based lights actually alternate red, green and blue LEDs in quick succession. And you see that in photos as horizontal streaks of rapid changes in white balance. This also happens with projectors that are LED based, and CFTs if their drivers aren't fast enough.