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Nasa Apollo Pictures

Nasa Apollo PicturesWhy when you look up you see the stars, but when you look at NASA Apollo images with people on the moon you see?

Why when you look up you see the stars, but when you look at NASA Apollo images with people on the moon you see the darkness?

http://www.badastronomy.com/bad/tv/foxap ...

"Good: The stars are there! They are simply too faint to be visible.

This is usually the first thing about HB when examining the hoax. This surprises me because it's the silliest assertion they make. However, it appeals to our common sense: when the sky is black, here on Earth, we see stars. Therefore we should see the moon as well.

I will say here today, and return several times: the Moon is not the Earth. The conditions are fantastic, and our common sense is likely to be missed.

The surface of the Moon is airless. On Earth, the thick atmosphere scatters sunlight, spreading it across the sky. That is why the sky is clear during the day. Without sunlight, the air is dark at night, which allows us to see the stars.

On the Moon, the lack of air means that the sky is dark. Even when the Sun is above the horizon throughout the day, the sky near it will be black. If you were standing on the moon, you might well see the stars, even during the day.

So why are they not in the images of Apollo? Imagine for a moment you're an astronaut on the surface of the moon. You want to shoot your fellow space traveler. The sun is low off the horizon, since all the lunar landings were made at the local morning. How do you define your camera? The lunar landscape is illuminated by the Sun, of course, and your friend is wearing a white spacesuit also brilliantly illuminated by the Sun. To take a picture of a bright object with a light background, you must set the exposure time to be fast, and close the opening set too, is like the pupil in your eye constricting to let less light in when you walk outside on a sunny day.

Thus, the picture you take is set for bright objects. Stars are faint objects! In the rapid exposure, they simply do not have time to register on the film. It has nothing to do with the sky is black or the lack of air, it's just a matter of exposure time. If you were to go outside here on Earth on the darkest night imaginable and take a photo with the exact same camera settings the astronauts used, you can not see the stars!

It's that simple. Remember that most often the first and strongest argument the HBs use, and it is easy to show that bad. Their arguments deteriorate from here. "

probably has to do with the camera focus, your eyes can not possibly focus on different distances and lighting levels better than any camera, but you do not see the stars when it is not looking up, focus on a well-lit house on the horizon and see you notice any star or just a black sky.

The contrast of brightness of the moon from the bottom surface of the sky makes the stars difficult to see. The same reason it is difficult for astronomers to see planets around other suns in our galaxy.

I think however in light of the stars would land blackened by light pollution which is the same reason that most large telescopes are far from towns ^ _ ^

they were slaughtered during the day. objects in the images were lit by the sun during the day, the same as on earth.

take a picture during the day. Note exposure and stop f. out at night and take a picture with the same exposure and stop f. Do you see stars?

Did you think about this before you ask that question?

You just ask ... "Why is it that when I use night vision goggles I can see things that I can not see without them the night?"

Uh ... apples and oranges, Guy ...

When you look at.

Posted on May 28, 2010.
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