No, I do not speak of "a moon" but "Moon" Jupiter's moons are very small relative to the planet, they are not a comparable case.
So the "tarkus law of relative sizes" only applies to a single object, The Moon - no other moon or object allowed?? Why would it only apply in one instance? That's simply ridiculous!!
Look tarkus, we know how big the Moon is, we know how big the Earth is, and we know how far the Moon is from the Earth, and we know how far the DISCOVR satellite is from both. Do you agree with that statement?
Here's the figures,
do you agree?Earth 7918 miles diameter
Moon 2158 miles diameter
Moon to Earth distance approx 250,000 miles
DISCOVR to Earth distance approx 1,000,000 miles
Now let's pick a random angular size calculator off the internet and calculate apparent sizes:
http://sizecalc.com/#distance=750000miles&physical-size=2158miles&perceived-size-units=degreeshttp://sizecalc.com/#distance=1000000miles&physical-size=7918miles&perceived-size-units=degreesFeel free to put your own figures into the calculator if you disagree with any of my figures.
The results are Moon 0.16 degrees, Earth 0.45 degrees. The angular size of the Earth from 1,000,000 miles away is
0.45 degrees, which surely you can see is much bigger than the Moon at
0.16 degrees.
And the debate about whether it is possible or not the focal trick is endless,
What "focal trick"? Photography is irrelevant to
relative size discussion, but your continued fascination with 'focal tricks' shows that are choosing to remain wilfully ignorant on the basics of photography. Google "basic photography concepts" or similar and allow yourself to be educated. Look for the words focal length, focus, and exposure to get you started.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=basic+photography+concepts in any case the question is what would a probe such manipulation ... getting smaller and darker to the Moon:
NASA used the same horrible image of Google Moon for animation.
See calculations above and then measure size in pixels of the Moon and Earth from NASA animation. A clue for you - they match...
You mention how dark the Moon is on the NASA animation, there are two aspects to this:
1) the DISCOVR satellite's mission is to photograph Earth weather and so the EXPOSURE (yes that word again) is optimised for that purpose. So when the Moon occasionally photo-bombs the image it will be underexposed,
2) but as explained to you before, the average albedo of the Moon is around 0.12, the Earth's albedo is around 0.2 to 0.3, so the Earth is actually physically brighter than the Moon. Do you really believe that an object dominated by regolith and lava plains, is brighter than an object with water and clouds??
Here's a photo I took last night of the Moon, didn't exactly burn a hole in the camera sensor with it's brightness did it? (and by the way - no stars....
)