Image I
Why there are no stars in the moon images?
Actually, in the image above this text, the stars are visible. So in most of the images, the stars are visible, but they are so small because the photographer has not used zoom. But the fact is that some of the images the stars seem like missing.
When the image of the astronaut is taken, the photographer must use the small iris with the camera. The images are taken straight to the sun. And that is blinding the camera. This is why the stars are missing in some of those images (Image I).
In fact, in some images the stars are visible. They are looking like dust, but when you are taking the cursor on the image, the thing, that looks like dust would be uncovered the stars (Image II).
Image II
The reason for the missing stars is that the image is taken to the side of the sun. The brightness of the sun is just covering the stars from the image, because the light, what comes from the sun is so bright, and the person who uses that camera must use the most minimum size of the hole objective.
Also sometimes there is used the dark layer along with small iris, that the stars would just be removed from images because of that kind of effect. But the bright radiation, what comes from the sun is in the main role, why there are no visible stars. The same effect makes it very hard to detect the planets around the other stars that are similar to the sun.
So in this time, the conspiracy theorists are wrong. Those stars are not removed by purpose. That means that there is a natural reason for the missing stars. They are removed because the photograph is taken on the bright side of the moon, and the reason for that is that because the moon is a locked object, what always turns the same side to Earth.
That makes it easy to communicate with astronauts, who are landed on that small planet. The thing is that communicating with vehicle or astronauts, what are another side on the moon is more difficult than communicating with rovers or other probes, what is operating on the planet Mars.
Image (I) https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/AS11-40-5875HRedit.jpg
Image (II) https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/AS11-40-5875HRedit.jpg
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