Erock
Muse
Small nit-pick. That is a hi res scan from the transparency before colour and contrast balance
If you draw a line from the top of the tool standing up in the soil to the corresponding part of its shadow, you can establish the direction of sunlight. If you draw a parallel line from the top of th UHF antenna, it passes right through the middle of the outer helmet. Keeping in mind that the antenna is on the left side of the PLSS, this leads me to conclude that the shadow is most likely falling on the far side of Young's helmet.
Looks like the shadow is on the floor as shown-
[qimg]http://s24.postimg.org/e7iryqlwl/Sun_angle.png[/qimg]
Small nit-pick. That is a hi res scan from the transparency before colour and contrast balance![]()
Why so it is.
But that begs the further question. Why could he not zoom in like everyone else?
Even in mspaint the antenna shadow is clearly visible. Personally, I use photoshop as a rule, but gimp is free.
At a guess, only web page versions were observed by our protagonist. The image is 2048x2048, but reduced to 600x600 on this webpage.
Looks like the shadow is on the floor as shown-
[qimg]http://s24.postimg.org/e7iryqlwl/Sun_angle.png[/qimg]
It's the first thing I noticed when looking intomoanmoon (nice typo there, Belz...) hoax nonsense. They always mention the lack of stars right off the bat, as if NASA forgot to put them in the fake studio sky, and forgot to add them in post, hoping that those meddling kids wouldn't notice.![]()
Your 'Sun rays' should be parallel.
Your 'Sun rays' should be parallel.
Why so it is.
But that begs the further question. Why could he not zoom in like everyone else?
Standard reason is that they wouldn't be able to put all the stars in the right place and people would notice
That is such a lame reason, though. As if they can't put stars in the proper place.
Indeed, the full argument goes that NASA purposely left the stars out because they wouldn't be able get them exactly in the right place. Then even amateur astronomers would be able to tell the pictures were fake. But what no one has been able to answer for me is that if it's so easy to tell that a star is out of place in a photo, why is it so hard to adjust it to be in the right place? It's almost as if they're making this up as they go.
Did you kill them?
History FAIL. If he knew anything about Apollo, he'd realize that those images were rebroadcast by pointing a TV camera at a monitor that was displaying the original slow-scan camera footage. It's not truly "original" footage. If only the SSTV tapes hadn't been overwritten, I bet they'd look different.
I've come to recognize a large degree of historical ignorance among the younger hoax believers (who seem to make up a large percentage of the whole). They simply have no idea what it was like in the late '60s/early '70s. They grew up in a world of ubiquitous networked computers that fit in their pockets, and they don't seem to understand the state of technology back then. In '76, you could get a portable video camera, but it was a large and heavy shoulder mounted unit, required a large and heavy tape unit slung over your other shoulder, and literally cost more than a new '76 Ferrari 308.Yes, ask them to find out what Photoshop was first introduced.
Even on a pitch-black winter night, he couldn't take pictures of the stars with his smart-phone. He could probably get Venus, maybe Sirius, but that's about it. What gets me is the way these people just pull some "fact" out of their posterior and assume it's true without ever verifying it.Yes, ask him to take a picture of a starry sky, where there is also a streetlight or a well-lit building in the picture.
Sure, but will our current protagonist return to acknowledge that fact?
Yes, ask them to find out what Photoshop was first introduced.
Yes, ask him to take a picture of a starry sky, where there is also a streetlight or a well-lit building in the picture.
Tell him to .... go soak his head.
Hans