Why are there no stars seen on the pictures of the moon?
In case it hasn't been put this way, in the simplest terms, as far as films of the '60s, '70s and later were concerned:
A fully-sunlit scene is between 30,000 times and 130,000 times brighter than any reasonably-good scene showing stars.Most standard films just cannot handle that sort of lighting ratio and nor can most standard electronic cameras. They can usually handle only a lighting ratio of about 11 f-stops or 1024:1, which is quite sufficient for most photos taken on or near Earth or its moon. We can shoot stars and we can photograph sunlit scenes, but not both at once.
With 125 ISO film, the normal full-sunlight exposure is 1/125th of a second @ f16. It's called the Sunny 16 rule. A photo which shows bright, recognisable constellations
technically requires an exposure of about ten seconds @ f2.8 with the same film, but in practice another factor called
reciprocity failure crops up with long exposures, and even longer ones such as 20 or 30 seconds are sometimes required.
This old post at the CosmoQuest forum (formerly BAUT and Bad Astronomy) shows the differences between some of those exposure settings.
My maths has never been too good, but I once worked out that if you got out as far as Pluto in its average orbit around the sun, it would be too dim for you to get a sharp hand-held full-sun photo of it on standard film, but if you took a sharp and properly-exposed shot of it and included plenty of sky, you still wouldn't see most stars in the photo.
I'll leave it to the experts to prove that right or wrong.
P.S.It has been wonderful to see more than two people talking about films and related technical matters of the Apollo era. I don't think I've ever seen that before.
My particular technical expertise revolved around simplifying Ansel Adams and Fred Picker's experiments with the Zone System and passing on the results to anyone else who was keen to listen and to do their own simple experiments. Due to my poor maths I made the very fortunate mistake of starting with a contrast of 11 zones, 0 to 10, which required halving the film speed and gave spectacular black-and-white prints which had an almost-3D look that few colour prints had, and made other photographers say, "Wow! How did you do that?"
The system gave repeatable results, required only a two or three films and a few hours to perfect, and cut out the need for any fancy enlarging computer or time- and money-wasting test prints. I used a stick with numbers on it beside the enlarger and used to think I was printing badly if it took 11 sheets of paper to get ten top-notch prints.
Even Ansel Adams, through his own experiments, later came around to my way of thinking about 11 zones. And damnit, a few months ago I found the article he wrote and put it away so carefully that I can't find it right now.