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originally posted by: Bilk22
a reply to: Jenisiz
What about when they were walking on the moon? You also didn't explain how they were able to use film and not have it pre-exposed by solar radiation on a celestial body that has no protective atmosphere.
I'm still here trying to learn
Not really. Our atmosphere and the Earth's magnetic poles protect us - at least that's how I understand it. When they were on the moon, they had none of that protection from harmful x-rays and neither did their cameras and film. Their film would have been exposed before they could ever have used it. The camera had no shielding. Please explain.
originally posted by: Saint Exupery
originally posted by: Bilk22
a reply to: Jenisiz
What about when they were walking on the moon? You also didn't explain how they were able to use film and not have it pre-exposed by solar radiation on a celestial body that has no protective atmosphere.
I'm still here trying to learn
Answered in detail here.
originally posted by: Bilk22
Not really. Our atmosphere and the Earth's magnetic poles protect us - at least that's how I understand it. When they were on the moon, they had none of that protection from harmful x-rays and neither did their cameras and film. Their film would have been exposed before they could ever have used it. The camera had no shielding. Please explain.
originally posted by: Saint Exupery
originally posted by: Bilk22
a reply to: Jenisiz
What about when they were walking on the moon? You also didn't explain how they were able to use film and not have it pre-exposed by solar radiation on a celestial body that has no protective atmosphere.
I'm still here trying to learn
Answered in detail here.
originally posted by: Saint Exupery
...whatever x-ray exposure the astronauts got on the Moon or going to or from it, the folk on the International Space Stations get it every day, including (and especially) when they go on spacewalks. The same goes for their film (or at least it did back when they used film - I don't know if everything is digital now).
The bottom line is that is not the big bad boogeyman that some people make it out to be. For example, in previous posts people were comparing medical x-rays to solar x-rays. A medical x-ray machine cranks-out EM radiation at around 8 million electron volts ("Hard" x-rays), whereas solar x-rays at less than 5 thousand electron volts ("Soft" x-rays). Soft x-rays can be blocked with relatively thin metal.