twik wrote:The hoax concern that "sometimes they said they could see stars, sometimes they couldn't -FAKE!!!1" strikes me like saying "sometimes the weather report tells me water falls from the sky, and sometimes it doesn't. Must be fake!"Ya know, I'm not even sure what Edward's claim is, and I hope he sees fit to clarify it. His PM-relayed post identified what he said were contradictions in different bits of items for public consumption and basically said there shouldn't have been. Is he actually saying this is evidence that Apollo as a whole was faked? Until he checks back in, we can't say for sure.
The thing that I find so interesting about this is how it morphs. Originally, it was quite simple - the stars on the lunar surface should have been so blazingly bright that not only would they be capturable by cameras set to properly expose the surface, but the astronauts should have spent long stretches just gazing at them in awe.[Stargazer]"Quintzillions."[/Stargazer] Again, stars on the Moon
are brighter than from the Earth, but not amazingly so... and you will always be looking at them through, at a minimum, some nice thick Lexan. On some thread here or elsewhere we kicked around the optical properties of the visor and shields.
You know, rather than doing the work they were sent to do. Not part of Edward's argument so far, but yes, Apollo was a
planetary science mission, not an astronomy mission, and the crews' time was very tightly constrained. Even so, we have at least one Apollo astronaut who
did take the trouble to visualize stars during a lunar EVA.
When it became very evident that this was not true, the argument started to revolve around "some astronauts said they saw stars in orbit, some said they couldn't. Clearly, someone is lying". I've noticed the APOD image being dragged in, as though it was anything other than a rather fanciful sketch, not well thought out by the artist.Great historical events of extended duration are ripe for this kind of cherry-picking; conspiracists often make unrealistic demands for perfect narrative consistency among sources widely varied in time and rigor. I can easily prove World War II was a hoax by this method.
It seems that they believe there must be *something* about the stars that's wrong, and they'll keep plugging at it until they find something that will stick.[Spongebob]Yeah, well, good luck with that![/Spongebob] I have yet to encounter a hoax believer who really knows much of anything about astronomy. Over on BAUT, poor Solon tried to claim that he believed Apollo happened, yet due to some magic physics stars (and planets, etc.) were not visible outside of the ionosphere. He got rather badly wrapped around the axle when it was pointed out that these claims necessarily contradicted each other.