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Originally posted by OutonaLimb
Here is a gif I made from Nasa apollo 17 photos
AS17-134-20385
AS17-134-20387
both taken from www.lpi.usra.edu....
I assume that is the Earth in the backround, although for the life of me I can't get my
head around how and why it should appear so small. The Moon's diameter is given
as 3474 km and the diameter of earth is 12800 km, making the Earth nearly 3.7
times as large across. Yet it appears roughly the same size in the background, as the
moon appears to us from Earth.
Now how the heck did it enter into the scene so quickly? There can only have been
a couple of seconds between the two photos.
Now I know you may say that the photographer has moved position a little, but relative
to all the weird smudging in the backround (what the heck accounts for this?), the
movement doesn't appear so drastic as to be able to account for the sudden appearance.
Note the strange smudging around the Earth also.
Also, what accounts for the spherical reflection seen in the spacemans visor?
The image is taken with a 60mm lens. On 70mm film that is a wide angle lens. Wide angle lenses make things look smaller.
Yet it appears roughly the same size in the background, as the
moon appears to us from Earth.
About 6 seconds actually. You can see that Jack has lowered the camera in order to get Earth in the shot by comparing how the mountain behind Gene changes it's alignment with Gene's arm. Here's another shot.
Now how the heck did it enter into the scene so quickly? There can only have been a couple of seconds between the two photos.
The surface of the visor is spherical.
Also, what accounts for the spherical reflection seen in the spacemans visor?
Originally posted by UberL33t
My take...
The reflection in the visor is the astronaut's helmet/visor opposite him taking the picture.
As for the other observation...the earth's size particularly...I have taken photos of extravagant full moons that to the naked eye appeared massive but on the photo looked like a pea in the sky. I presume it would be something similar.
Moving in the frame so abruptly, I think you already nailed it.
There are better quality scans available.
These photos are taken from an official NASA site!
Originally posted by RocksFromSpace
Originally posted by OutonaLimb
Here is a gif I made from Nasa apollo 17 photos
AS17-134-20385
AS17-134-20387
both taken from www.lpi.usra.edu....
I assume that is the Earth in the backround, although for the life of me I can't get my
head around how and why it should appear so small. The Moon's diameter is given
as 3474 km and the diameter of earth is 12800 km, making the Earth nearly 3.7
times as large across. Yet it appears roughly the same size in the background, as the
moon appears to us from Earth.
Now how the heck did it enter into the scene so quickly? There can only have been
a couple of seconds between the two photos.
Now I know you may say that the photographer has moved position a little, but relative
to all the weird smudging in the backround (what the heck accounts for this?), the
movement doesn't appear so drastic as to be able to account for the sudden appearance.
Note the strange smudging around the Earth also.
Also, what accounts for the spherical reflection seen in the spacemans visor?
What you need to be asking is why the Earth looks so small.. It looks to be the size of the moon as viewed from earth yet the earth is a lot larger then the moon, it should be at least 4 times the size it's shown in the photo.
Originally posted by OutonaLimbBut what is with the artifacts and pixilation around the solid objects and the dark smudging seen throughout?
Are not these indicators of cut/paste inserts and/or photo manipulation?
Originally posted by wmd_2008
reply to post by OutonaLimb
Well to all of you with NO understanding of photography the size of the earth will depend on the film format and the focal length of the lens.
Now we are in the digital age cameras are effected by the size of the sensor see link
On a full frame DSLR a 500mm telephoto gives approx 10x magnification on a camera with an APS-C sensor the crop factor is 1.5 so that 500mm becomes 750mm and 15x approx magnification.
You have to see the full frame of the negative and know the size of the lens on the camera to compare images.
Originally posted by RocksFromSpace
What you need to be asking is why the Earth looks so small.. It looks to be the size of the moon as viewed from earth
Originally posted by OutonaLimb
the
movement doesn't appear so drastic as to be able to account for the sudden appearance.
Originally posted by ngchunterThe earth in that image is about 105 pixels across, so just over two degrees wide. If anything it's too large, but it's reasonably close to the expected number - these are approximate calculations based on the theoretical field of view.
Originally posted by Saint Exupery
Originally posted by ngchunterThe earth in that image is about 105 pixels across, so just over two degrees wide. If anything it's too large, but it's reasonably close to the expected number - these are approximate calculations based on the theoretical field of view.
That's what I got, based on a 71-degree (diagonal) FOV. Actual visual diameter of the Earth on Dec 11,1972 was ~1.9 degrees. Part of the too-large answer is because the Earth image was out-of-focus, which of course causes a little bit of blooming. Asking around, someone pointed-out that the 60mm focal length number is for the lens focussed on infinity. When focused on a closer object (in this case, Gene Cernan with the flag), the lense extends, making the focal length longer and the objects in the image larger. This could account for the rest of the discrepancy.
I love learning new stuff...
Originally posted by wmd_2008
reply to post by ngchunter
Hi ngchunter was it you or someone else who did the exact same on another thread when this same subject was brought up.