Stunning hi res images from the Apollo program
https://www.flickr.com/photos/projectapolloarchive/21660110255/in/album-72157658601662068/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/projectapolloarchive/21660110255/in/album-72157658601662068/
This is a question I have always had about the moon landings. Logically they used the best and most advanced camera systems on the planet, so why are all the films and photos so fuzzy? The above photos are what we should expect from the cost and technology involved, but everything shown at the time and since, have always been; low resolution and very poor quality. Yes I understand the live broadcast was transmitted over 1000s of miles, but didn't that have anything on film to bring back with them? These thoughts can only fuel the conspiracy theory, of it didn't really happen or it was faked, as in the Capricorn One film.
This is a question I have always had about the moon landings. Logically they used the best and most advanced camera systems on the planet, so why are all the films and photos so fuzzy? The above photos are what we should expect from the cost and technology involved, but everything shown at the time and since, have always been; low resolution and very poor quality. Yes I understand the live broadcast was transmitted over 1000s of miles, but didn't that have anything on film to bring back with them? These thoughts can only fuel the conspiracy theory, of it didn't really happen or it was faked, as in the Capricorn One film.
I noticed some of those pics have no footprints leading towards the cameraman but show the lander (doh!). ...
This is a question I have always had about the moon landings. Logically they used the best and most advanced camera systems on the planet, so why are all the films and photos so fuzzy? The above photos are what we should expect from the cost and technology involved, but everything shown at the time and since, have always been; low resolution and very poor quality. Yes I understand the live broadcast was transmitted over 1000s of miles, but didn't that have anything on film to bring back with them? These thoughts can only fuel the conspiracy theory, of it didn't really happen or it was faked, as in the Capricorn One film.
I noticed some of those pics have no footprints leading towards the cameraman but show the lander (doh!). Plus just how did they have that 2-way conversation back to control whilst being 1000s of miles away having passed through the Van Allen Belt by using passive radiation from the boosters to protect them?
Anyway, it made many great movies![]()
I'd say you have that backwards. If it were faked the temptation would be to make it just a little too perfect.
I wonder why I can't see photos of starry sky - at least one guy from all these expeditions should have got same idea - point your camera towards the sky, so there wouldn't be any bright moon surface in it. Otherwise beautiful and moving photos.
PS: if you find photos of starry sky in there somewhere - please share a link with me
Even in far fetched case they didn't have tripods (or possibly find something to put camera on) for their cameras on all of these expeditions. Stars should be a bit brighter from Luna and one of the guys could hold it in his hands and hold shutter button for 15-30seconds. Or these cameras on every expedition didn't have the option for longer exposure and no high sensitivity film rolls? It seems unlikely to me - how else would they make such great photos in low light conditions inside their modules? I wouldn't mind seeing something like this: It would very be easy to resolve it to pointy stars picture even on my crappy PC todayBecause of the amount of light stars give off and the speed of the camera shutter. There's not enough light from the stars to register on film unless you keep the camera still and keep the aperture open. There's still not a camera in existence that can capture what the human eye sees in a single shot. The same rules apply on Earth... Go outside on a really starry night and take a picture of the sky with a standard shutter speed... You'll get a black rectangle.The really pretty pictures of night skies come from people who set a camera up and then leave the aperture open for a nice long time to capture the low light. Of course, if the camera is moving or anything moves while the picture is taken, it shows up as a streak.
No, they couldn't do that. Most of the photos were taken from cameras that were mounted to the astronauts' chests, and the shutter speeds were set to 1/250s. The operator could alter the aperture size to cope with varying light levels, but that's pretty much it. The camera equipment was pretty much the same for all of the lunar missions.one of the guys could hold it in his hands and hold shutter button for 15-30seconds. Or these cameras on every expedition didn't have the option for longer exposure and no high sensitivity film rolls? It seems unlikely to me - how else would they make such great photos in low light conditions inside their modules?
They weren't there to look at the sky - they already knew what the sky looked like. They were there to study the moon, and that's what they did.
Because of the amount of light stars give off and the speed of the camera shutter. There's not enough light from the stars to register on film unless you keep the camera still and keep the aperture open. There's still not a camera in existence that can capture what the human eye sees in a single shot. The same rules apply on Earth... Go outside on a really starry night and take a picture of the sky with a standard shutter speed... You'll get a black rectangle.The really pretty pictures of night skies come from people who set a camera up and then leave the aperture open for a nice long time to capture the low light. Of course, if the camera is moving or anything moves while the picture is taken, it shows up as a streak.