LO is gonna have my ass for burning bandwidth like a Saturn V, but here goes...
Now answer this: WHY WAS DAY IN THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF APOLLO 16 moon landing?
Why should anyone answer your questions? You don’t answer any, why should we?
At any rate the question is wrong. This isn’t the “opposite side” from the Apollo 16 landing site. “Orion” landed at latitude 8° 58’ S, longitude 15° 30’ E. AS16-M-3021 is centered at latitude 12° N, longitude 103° 42’ E which is just over a quarter of the way around the Moon from the landing site.
You were also wrong to compare AS15-M-3021 (centered at 12° N, 103° 42’ E )…
…with this image (centered at latitude 0°, longitude 180°)…
Because as you can see from the coordinates, the upper photo is 78° - or nearly a quarter of the way around the globe from the second image and (as you yourself pointed-out) the backside is mostly in shadow, so there is very little visible overlap (It also didn’t help that AS16-M-3021 is rotated over 130° so that north is to the lower-right. Here it rotated so that north is up:
Incidentally, the second image is not a photograph at all (and it’s not from 2009). It’s an orthographic map projection of a mosaic stitched together from over 15,000 LOR wide-angle camera images. This was
released in 2011. This image was one of six – each 60° apart (the link has all six with links to zoomable versions).
In this image, I’ve annotated some conspicuous features:
Here is an illustration (also centered at latitude 0°, longitude 180°) showing how much of the far side was in shadow at the time AS16-M-3021 was taken.
On the left is an albedo map that shows the dark-bottomed craters like Tsiolkovsky and Mare Moscoviense. On the right is a shaded relief map of the same area that shows the other craters better. Note that the terminator is quite close to Tsiolkovsky
If you wanted a closer match to AS16-M-3021, you could have started with the orthographic map projection centered on latitude 0°, longitude 120°E):
Here are the diagrams showing the shading as before:
Here is the orthographic with features annotated, including (as before) Mare Moscoviense, Tsiolkovsky and Lomonsov:
From this angle, you can see many of the features in other images, such as this Soviet Luna 3 images from 1959…
…and this Chinese Chang’e 2 image from 2014…
… and, of course, AS16-M-3021:
Because the sun is setting on Tsiolkovsky, the sun is only shining on the rim and central peak, but not the crater floor. As we’ve seen (above), Mare Moscoviense is already deep in shadow.
At this point, I can point-out another big problem with your two comparison images: You are comparing an orthographic map projection that shows an entire 180° hemisphere with a photo taken at an altitude of only 1,200km above a sphere that is only 1,737km in radius. From that altitude, the horizon is much closer, as shown in this diagram:
Thus, instead of a 180° hemisphere, we only see ~107.5° from one side of the Moon to the other in AS16-M-3021.
Here is the ~orthographic shade diagram of the Moon from the same angle as AS16-M-3021:
Here is the shade diagram from the same angle, but at the altitude that AS16-M-3021 was taken:
Notice that Mare Crisium and Mare Moscoviense are, from this low angle, much closer to the horizon to the left and right, and Tsiolkovsky is near the horizon to the lower right.
Compare it to AS16-M-3021:
So in summary, when comparing these two images:
Tarkus did not correct for the almost 80° difference in center-point.
Tarkus did not account for the difference between an orthographic map projection and a point-of-view less than one radius above the surface of a sphere.
Because of these two things, as others have pointed-out…
Tarkus did not account for limb-foreshortening when comparing the near-straight-down view of craters from the photograph to the nearly edge-on POV from the orthographic projection.
Also, because he had the center-point so far off,
Tarkus incorrectly stated that the area shown in AS16-M-3021should be in shadow, when it was not.
Tarkus did not correct for the ~130° rotation of the photograph.
If we plot these errors onto the Earth, using the same latitudes & longitudes and the proportional altitude for the close-up POV of the photograph, then Tarkus’ errors basically compared this…
…to this…
…and claiming NOT A SINGLE FEATURE MATCHES ANOTHER.
This brings us to the most serious error of all. When Tarkus believed he saw a mismatch, he made no attempt whatsoever to try to understand it. He didn’t try to find out anything about the images. Hell, he didn’t even ask anyone if they saw something he didn’t. He just assumed that if he doesn’t understand it, it must be fake.
That’s no way to go through life, kid.