--- On Sat, 4/24/10, power ofunity <[email protected]> wrote:


> I am a professional photographer, ...
> 
> Where are the stars?


I usually don't waste one minute of my time on this mindless drivel, because 
those who are convinced that all the evidence is wrong or faked, but on this 
one topic, a so called professional photographer would know instantly that this 
issue, if nothing else was a canard.

You don't need to be a professional to know that if you make an exposure with 
any camera with the rule of thumb settings for direct sunlight, ie. ISO 100, 
f/16, 1/100th second, NO stars will be recorded. Why? Because they are too 
faint to be recorded.

The exposures made on the lunar surface were in daylight. The cameras were set 
for direct sunlight exposures. The reason the sky is black is because there is 
no atmosphere, not because it was night.

Stars in the sky WOULD BE evidence that the images were faked, not the other 
way around.

A professional photographer needs to understand and be an expert in their own 
field. Any photographer that doesn't know this extremely basic fundamental of 
photograph certainly is no expert, and most likely not even a photographer. If 
you can't understand the fundamentals in a field you claim an expert level of 
understanding, how can you possible understand something of far more complexity 
like global politics, celestial mechanics, or manned spaceflight?

Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography


      
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