Why No Stars in Moon Landing Photos?
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The Josh Universe - Space Discord Server shared an announcement explaining why stars are not visible in the Moon landing photos. This is due to the cameras using fast shutter speeds and low sensitivity settings necessary to properly expose the very bright subjects, like the lunar surface and astronaut suits, which made the faint starlight undetectable. The lack of stars is a normal photographic outcome, similar to taking pictures during the day on Earth.
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The Moon landing photos do not show stars because the cameras were set to photograph very bright subjects. The Moon’s surface and the astronauts’ white suits reflect strong sunlight, so the cameras used fast shutter speeds and low sensitivity. These settings made faint objects like stars too dim to appear in the pictures.
The astronauts used specially modified Hasselblad cameras with exposure settings similar to taking photos on a sunny day on Earth. When you take a daytime photo, the sky often looks empty even though stars are still there. The same thing happened on the Moon—the stars were present but the camera could not capture them.
If you take one of the Moon landing photos and increase the brightness or contrast, some stars can be seen in certain images. This works because a small amount of starlight was captured, just not enough to be visible at normal settings. The lack of stars in the original photos is a normal result of how cameras work, not anything unusual.

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