Category: Photography and Optics
- The Missing Stars
This theory claimed that stars were absent from Apollo lunar photographs because NASA, having staged the moon landing, could not calculate or paint the correct star field convincingly and chose to leave the sky black instead. The theory depends on the expectation that a star-filled sky should appear in all lunar images because the Moon has no atmosphere. The historical and photographic record shows a different explanation: Apollo surface photographs were taken in bright lunar daylight with exposure settings designed for sunlit astronauts and terrain, which made the much dimmer stars too faint to register. The “missing stars” argument became one of the most popular and persistent image-based moon-hoax claims.