Every now and then an astronaut space walk photo includes the sun (an apollo16 photo comes to mind). I thought that what we see on earth is filtered by the atmosphere, and that refraction explains why it is so yellow and the sky so blue. I can see how a spacewalk in the upper atmosphere might still have this effect,, but how about when you're on the moon? Would the sun still be "sunny"" as we know it? What about the invisible radiation, is it converted to light somehow? Is there a moon photo that includes the sun?
I'm asking here since there are analytical minds that won't automatically accept what they see in photos.
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strix-varia ago
The question should be, is there is photo of the earth other than the ONE that nasa has been showing to humanity for going on 30 years. The same photo over and over and over again. No, it's because they don't have one and no, it's because the photos you are seeing of the cosmos are artist rendered photos. People actually believe everything that nasa puts out.
senpaithatignoresyou ago
http://mentallandscape.com/C_CatalogEarth.htm
strix-varia ago
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=youtube+chris+hadfield+slip&t=ffab&ia=videos&iax=1&iai=NxLC0lBh05c