
In fact, I was born about two decades after the Sea of Tranquility was first walked upon. I have never been alive in a time when there have not been human footprints on Earth's only natural satelite. It would have been very difficult to fake something like that, and besides, if the whole Apollo program was a scripted fakery, why would they have a catastrophic failure occur? That would give the commies some time to gloat, wouldn't it? The cloud of space junk and oxygen was seen by tracking stations in both the US and the Soviet Union. Additionally, they had to be placed very carefully in predetermined spots, something that NASA would want people doing.Īnother point: when Apollo 13's oxygen tanks exploded they created a debris field that peaked at over 100 miles across.
#Capricorn one learjet plus#
If Apollo never went to the moon, what are they looking at, or alternatively who put the mirrors there? Those mirrors are there, lunar soil is not THAT reflective, plus it would scatter any light rays in every direction. I feel like I'm demeaning myself for posting in such a silly thread, but I'll speak my two cents.įirst of all, NASA and other scientists use mirrors placed by several of the Apollo missions to bounce lasers off of to judge the moon's distance. For a 6圆 cm negative, a 50 mm lens (medium wide-angle lens) and F/11 aperture, focus set to 4 metres gives decent sharpness from 2 m to infinity. The former will prevent blur from shaking or moving the camera about and the latter will give a long depth of field. A setting in between for mixed scenes, and you're pretty much guaranteed a perfect exposure in every frame!įurthermore, not a single shot should have to come out blurred or out of focus as the light levels would allow a fast shutter and a small aperture. Even in shadows, the earth provides plenty of light, and for the brief stay, a fixed setting for the earthlight would also be simple to get.

The intensity of the sun is constant so as long as the motif is fully lit, a single setting will always give a perfect exposure.

In many ways, the surface of the moon provides a perfect photography environment. I know a fair bit about photography and when I first watched that cr*p, I just sat amazed at the stupidity of some of the people in it.
