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Zurack (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
Oh, and in the video I linked, they point at the sun!
Here is a great site about all this "the moon landing is fake" thing:
tinyurl (dot) com/e3gx
The page is quite long and old, but it's very good if you really want to know "the truth".
Zurack (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
And about the "worst cameras" thing, there is lots of great colored photos in the video that you are watching right now. And even more in other sites and databases. Just the video was not that good, but they have some great videos of Apollo 12 to 17.
Oh, and here's a nice video of Apollo 11:
tinyurl (dot) com/8s645t
There's like 4 CGI scenes, but they are easy to identify.
The video is supposed to be "sentimental", but there is still some great footage of the moon landing.
Zurack (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
Get a camera and a shiny astronaut suit, now try to photograph the astronaut AND dim stars at the same time.
You need some seconds of exposure to photograph stars, the 0:32 image is just a fraction of a second.
Check this image I took of the Moon, Venus and Jupiter:
tinyurl (dot) com/9sv6gm
It was taken with an exposure of 1/4 of a second, much longer than the astronaut's photos, and no shiny suits and ground.
Sorry, but I know more about astrophotography than you.
GuerraXV (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
Man on the moon in 1969???
fake
sorry!!!
vflook (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
thats great...I missed the purpose of this. Someone enlighten everyone since no one cares. I just see a tremendous waste if time energy and US tax dollars. Every day I wake up and see how my country is slipping away....are we moving to the moon?
xXxDerwoodxXx (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
at 0:32 seconds in u mean to tell me with all the billions of stars u cant even see 1 little one at all, and i am not saying this never happend either, oh yeah how come today when they leave earth they always bring the worst cameras? not even color? frame rate is horroble.
Zurack (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
Inside the atmosphere we need to worry about the weather, day/night cycles, and other problems, but outside, the telescope is always working, you don't need to worry about daylight, clouds, light pollution, and even at night the atmosphere disturbs the telescope images. When it's night, look at the stars, you can see that they flicker, it's because of the atmosphere.
xXxDerwoodxXx (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
ok right but why do we leave earth to get outside of the atmosphere to get better pics of the universe. That is what hubble is doing now
Zurack (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
xXxDerwoodxXx, like I said 2 posts ago, it's not easy to photograph stars, and why would they point at the sun? But I'm sure you can find the sun in some photos in an Apollo images database (Yes, hundreds of images with the exact time they have been taken, that's impossible to fake).
CoDF4TH3R (December 31, 1969 at 4:59 pm)
it would be more random to post a cooment like that lol |