Seriously just take your camera & try it .
You know why there's no need?
Because of the thousands of astronomers, amateur and professional, who are monitoring the sun on a daily basis across the globe, every day.
They record solar granulation, flares, sunspots, and when they happen, transits of the inner planets across the solar disk, and even the times the ISS crossed in front of the sun.
So, I ask you: If this giant body is supposedly between us and the sun, as the black-ball-in-the-sun pics proponents would have us believe it is, how can all those thousands of astronomers be missing--with their specialized equipment to record solar activity--this event?
And why would they not be posting such black-ball images of a body between us and the sun in the many online astronomy forums and groups, which of course anyone is free to do.
The answer is, if it was happening they'd be posting it, and it'd be front page news and burning up the internet...not by virtue of someone pointing a camera at the sun and getting an optical effect due to the way a camera works, but because thousands of astronomers would be posting the same images at the same time.
You should see the activity when something real happens, like a Mercury transit.
You know, the way they do as Jupiter or Saturn watchers, and Mars observers.
But there are no photos being posted in such groups by thousands or hundreds or dozens of observers. There is no hubbub about such images in these groups. Maybe some laughter. I could probably find some of those comments.
So, do you see why your claim just can't hold water, and why anyone would be wasting their time pointing their camera at the sun in hopes of capturing Niburu?
i wont think for you.While you are at it you might care to look for evidence of a nuclear bomb used in the sinai 4000years ago, the proof is right there to this day and visible from space.
You should rename this thread: "I just inhaled 4 cans of spray paint!"
You should kindly set fire to yourself.