Originally posted by jboogienoj
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm still dancing around I see.
I thought I addressed it fully, if there's something you're still not understanding about basic photography just tell me and I'll try to explain it
for you.
This has always been like a Building 7 or something.
So because you're wrong about this you're wrong about that?
Never any clarity on the stars we SHOULD BE SEEING OUT THERE..... Hmmmmmmmmmmmm...?
You can't see stars in a photo taken with a daylight speed exposure, it's really that simple. The moon is bright so it needs a fast exposure, the
stars are dim and need a long exposure to be seen, how much more clear can you get?
Here's a photo I took of the moon at the end of the last total lunar eclipse (I missed the best part due to clouds). The moon is brightly exposed,
maybe even a tad too brightly, but no stars are visible anywhere in the photo:
farm4.static.flickr.com...
Another one, just a normal moon picture I took a few months ago. No stars anywhere around the moon:
i319.photobucket.com...
I have a pretty nice camera and telescope, but there's just no way to capture stars and the moon in the same exposure, save for during totality
during a total lunar eclipse. I dare you to show me an example that proves otherwise.
Out of curiosity, do you also think the shuttle and ISS are faked because no stars are visible in any of the mission photography?
[edit on 14-11-2008 by ngchunter]