I have increased the Curves in 2 official Apollo Hi Res images taken from the archive. I'm now curious as to the said 'artifacts' that are revealed in the black space. To me they look like Stars (Stars=Planets, Galaxies, Nebulae etc.)
OK, so a couple of points here.
Stars are most certainly NOT "Planets, Galaxies,Nebulae". I'll give you that it might be possible to mistake a planet as a star, but not a nebula.
To you, they look like astronomical images. however, that's an argument from ignorance. You have repeatedly stated that you are a professional photographer which is an attempt to establish credentials. I have to ask what are your credentials when it comes to astro-photography and processing of astronomical images?
To me what you have shown looks nothing like images of stars, planets or nebulae. I have a number of years experience of imaging these objects and your manipulated image looks nothing like anything that I have ever captured.
To establish my credentials, here's an image of Mars that I took a couple of years ago from my observatory, with the individual data channels illustrating how the final RGB image was constructed:
I'm more than happy to share images of nebulae and other planets.
Indeed. It could be Noise; but it is not Uniform noise!
Noise doesn't have to be uniform. By it's nature it is random.
There's also different types of noise- grain, dust on the scans as well as noise generated by the scanning equipment- read-out noise and thermal noise, for example.
There are blues greens and reds and trails and irregular shapes. You really need to see for yourself.
You will not capture colour information (of stars or nebulae) in single exposures a fraction of a second long. Not with modern CCD or CMOS camera and most definitely not with 50 year old analogue system. Noise, however, can, and will, have random colour information in there.
Adjusting Curves to reveal Noise did not occur in the Foreground instances as it resulted in Black and White high contrast only. Noise was only evident at the horizon and black of space. (apart from some light glow from the craft etc.)
That's because the foreground has real data which can be stretched by altering the histogram (which you have done). The black sky has little or no information, which is why, when stretched, the histogram either breaks down (you can see this in the PS histogram- look for where the histogram breaks into jagged peaks rather than retaining a smooth distribution curve).
I'm not suggesting they arranged the stars After looking closely, albeit with a limited capacity and knowledge of the film used and it's latency,(thanks to Kiwi for the info though) the level of details of the scans etc. I have concluded that of these particular images (I have found other anomalous instances now in other images, where NOISE doesn't even exist in the black) that they are indeed stars, but the sky has moved. This means the illumination of the craft and foreground is static, but the sky is still in motion.
So, in effect what you are saying is that NASA was able to perpetuate a massive hoax involving hundreds of thousands of people, but were not able to fake two images without jiggling the background around. Really?
There's little else for me to say if we simply state as FACT that what I am seeing are NOT Stars.
Almost certainly correct. What does mystify me is why you would then jump to a conclusion that the images are faked.