weedstoner420
Well-Known Member
You don't see stars during the day on earth, even though they're still there in the sky. And in all those pics taken from the moon, the moon's surface is lit up, so it's "daytime," i.e. the sun is shining on it.So the farther away from an earth you get , where you CAN see stars, but going out into space and getting closer to those stars, would mean the stars get harder to see?
Okay, you're in your house and can see bigfoot kind of blurry standing on the edge of a field 100 yards away. You grab your camera and go outside your house and get 50 yards closer, then bigfoot gets harder to see even if he/she/they (it's a woke bigfoot) never moved ? Freaky.
There's no atmosphere on the moon, though, so the sky looks black, but just like on earth, it's way too bright for a camera to show both the stars and the sunlit ground at the same time. When you turn the exposure down far enough to see the ground and the earth in the background clearly, the stars disappear from the image. If someone took pics from the far side of the moon, maybe then you could see stars in the sky.
Either way, if the pictures from the moon and space were fake, it would seem really silly to just forget to put in any stars at all, right?