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(and he has not claimed that it WOULD be too dark on the near side)
In lunar orbit,it was possible to see all the features on the lunar surface in Earthshine as easily as they were seen on the sunlit portion of the Moon. Transition across the terminator from the sunlit portion to the Earth!it portion was rapid, and there was no time required for the eye to adjust to the Earthshine to pick out details on the lunar surface.
"There is no dark side in the moon, really. As a matter of fact it's all dark"
GaryN
That video is strange, the Earth seems to jiggle sideways as it rises. It is a series of still images made into a movie though, not a real-time video.
This was supposed to be the first video of the far side (what took them so long) of the Moon, but again, the camera goes into the IR, and can take still images, so I don't think it was a 'real' video.
www.nasa.gov...
The near side has Earthshine, and some airglow. The far side has the Sun, so it should be easy to take a video with an off-the-shelf video camera. Never been done.
In lunar orbit,it was possible to see all the features on the lunar surface in Earthshine as easily as they were seen on the sunlit portion of the Moon. Transition across the terminator from the sunlit portion to the Earth!it portion was rapid, and there was no time required for the eye to adjust to the Earthshine to pick out details on the lunar surface.
So, going from full sunlight, about 1 million Lux, to Earthshine at about 10 Lux, no dark adaptation was required to see the same details. So they either have amazing eyes, or the difference in brightness was not that great, and can probably be put down to airglow, which is also present above the Moon when the Sun is up.
On Apollo 17 they took a photograph of the crater Schluter, just in Earthshine. It looks the same as the other images from orbit.