It is 'intensity' of light, not the 'source' of the light, which is the potentially damaging factor.
- If you photograph a room scene, photographing a mirrored image of the scene is non-destructive.
- If you photograph the sun, photographing a mirrored reflection of the sun is destructive.
pwm2 wrote:
Not sure about the video with the CCD sensor - if it was the image sensor or maybe the exposure control that got overloaded. One thing that can happen with electronics is that you get a latchup phenomenon, where you get a high charge somewhere in (potentially parasitic) capacitor in a chip, and it can take seconds, minutes or even many hours, before it gets discharged.
^
And even the human eye has its own photochemical version of electrical latch-up! That is why you continue to have residual blotches in your vision after looking at any very bright source of light!