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originally posted by: Terpene
a reply to: Ophiuchus1
Bug on a lense?
swamp gas?
sure let's ad ginormous cheese cake to the list...
Booth points out that McGoohan had outlined the themes of The Prisoner in a 1965 interview, long before Markstein's tenure as script editor on the brief fourth series of Danger Man.
Ok so why not answer the second part of my question? Why not state the photo is damaged or compromised in some way? They are presenting it as a photo of the moon, but we should assume aspects are flaws? That doesn’t make sense. I also don’t believe they are presenting all the photos they took just for a complete record, only chosen photos. Your first answer doesn’t add up.
originally posted by: OneBigMonkeyToo
a reply to: Skepticape
For the sake of completeness of the record, just as they published all the photos from the missions regardless of quality. It's only the pretty 'money shots' that made it into the papers and the photo sets for sale, and many people assume those are the only ones they made available. If they hadn't published it, we'd be having threads about them hiding the photograph, which they didn't.
My later post on this has the description of what went wrong with the development and film.
originally posted by: Skepticape
Ok so why not answer the second part of my question? Why not state the photo is damaged or compromised in some way? They are presenting it as a photo of the moon, but we should assume aspects are flaws? That doesn’t make sense. I also don’t believe they are presenting all the photos they took just for a complete record, only chosen photos. Your first answer doesn’t add up.
Between frames 2844 and 2845 there are 20 very dark exposures of the lunar surface
These are not numbered and are too dark to be of value no attempt was made to plot
or index these frames.
originally posted by: ArMaP
a reply to: Bloodworth
As Skepticape said, it's a question of exposure.
If you want to take a photo of a bright area you will not get any faint lights or subtle details in dark areas, and the opposite happens when you take a photo of a dark scene, any brighter area will appear completely white and with no detail.
Taking as example the photos taken by the astronauts on the Moon's surface, they were taken during the day, so how could you see stars in the black sky when you are seeing a brightly lit Moon surface?
The same happens if you try to take a photo of the full Moon, you will see that the faintest stars disappear.
But, yes, there are some photos showing the brightest stars (they were almost normal cameras, not telescopes), like these:
AS17-154-23647
AS17-154-23648
AS17-154-23649