So...what were the alpha and epsilon figures for the silver paint used on the EDC models on the lunar surface?
I've never found a reliable figure for absorptivity and emissivity. It's not just "silver paint" as some have said; the press kits and other secondary material describe the cameras as "silver-colored," leading some to believe actual silver was used. I'm pretty sure the active ingredient in the coating is aluminum, simply from having examined the camera in detail and knowing what aluminum looks like. But the formulation matters in Al-based thermal coatings, because they include other ingredients to alter the overall optical profile, so you can't just look up figures for aluminum. I need to know the exact product that was used, and I don't know that yet.
A hoaxer who claims the film would have instantly frozen in the shade...
...clearly doesn't understand the time component of heat transfer. The film, by the way, was the then-secret Estar base. Now it's a common stock from Kodak, but back in the 1960s it was a special polyester film base that was invented for the Corona spy satellites. It's
meant for the space environment, specifically for hardiness across temperature fluctuations.
I had assumed you'd want a low emissivity to avoid picking up heat from the lunar surface and to slow your cooling rate in the shade.
Many materials intended for thermal regulation are explicitly non-Kirchoff materials. And you typically want an α/ε ratio of around 0.1 for passive heat rejecting in sunlight. Bare metals have that ratio up around 2 or 3, but any ratio where epsilon does not dominate will cause you problems.
But even with a low absorptivity it got very hot in the sun because it was unable to get rid of the heat it did pick up from the sun.
Yup, sucking vastly more heat that it can blow.
Certainly not the hundreds of degrees below zero that the hoaxers like to kick around.
Well that theory doesn't even begin to describe the thermal conduction and radiation paths within the magazine. Yes, you start with the radiative heat transfer solution of the magazine, but if what you're concerned with is the thermal condition of the
film, then you've only begun your homework.