@Uho,
Is the photo of the dog through a different lens? That is incredibly blurry. Can you explain a little what is going on in the last photo?
One of the things I wanted to do was use a different lens over the sensor to see if the gradient would show up. My suspicions were that the lens housing was of low emissivity. Basicall the white paint is reflecting the radiation emitted from the sensor. The sensor see's it's own heat. The tight space of the lens housing puts it very close to the detector, so this makes it very easy to essentially feel it's own heat. To give a good example, you put your hand next to a soldering iron. You can't feel the heat till you are just an inch away. It gives off heat no matter how far away you are, but it dissipates (loses focus) and you can't feel it. It behaves like visible light, so the rays scatter the further from thr source they get. But like proximity focus, you get close enough to the source, and you suddenly become aware of the heat without having to touch it. Well the seek detector is within proximity focus of the lens housing, so it can *almost* see the bottom inside of the lens housing. But all it looks like is a circular gradient. It wouldn't normally see the lens housing, it doesn't normally get very hot. But the detector heats up, reasonably warm, and the inside bottom of the lens housing becomes a reflected source. It then becomes the proximity focused heat we see on our screens. It's close enough to resolve the circular cut out area of the lens housing, but too far away to be sharp.
I welcome anyone to challenge this. Use a longer focal length, something that puts some distance between the lens and sensor. You'll lose the gradient.
EDIT: In addition, as Mike pointed out, there appears to be an alignment issue. This changes the way the gradient appears. I personally removed the lens housing, cleared the glue, and got the lens closer. This gave the sensor better focus out further. It also reduced the gradient. In theory, according to what I stated, this would cause the gradient to get sharper (proximity focus, remember?) But what is happening is the bottom inside of the lens housing is moving onto a blind spot. Take both your hands and make a circle with your index fingers and thumbs. Close one eye and make the circle in front of the open one. Start a few inches away. See the fingers? Of course, its reflected light. Image how bright they would be if your eyes actually created light. Start moving the circle closer. Notice something? You suddenly cant see certain areas of your circle. Move the circle around, theres your alignment issues. Keep moving them in. Too close and suddenly you can't see them at all. This is what's happening.