Here’s a visual test you can do without any equipment. Go ou...

Tauri

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hex

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nevent

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Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-04-08T07:02:35Z

↳ Reply to Tauri (npub1x9q89st049pnuym57ch9kqkgzcu5dmff32wduwc4g9gnc2w3nlls8hcsg7)

They released one with stars at the very first day of the mission. Stars can be seen on photos only when you expose for the shadow areas, usually in p...

Here’s a visual test you can do without any equipment. Go out during a full Moon night and see how many stars you can see. Take a mental picture. Then about a month later, go to the same place during a New Moon (basically no Moon in the sky) and compare how many stars you can see. You’ll notice far more stars during the New Moon because the bright Moon washes out the fainter ones.

It’s a similar principle in photography. When there’s a very bright light source in the frame, it can overwhelm the scene and make faint objects like stars much harder to capture in a single exposure, because the dynamic range can exceed what the camera can handle at once. While the human eye can adapt to different light levels over time better than a camera, it doesn’t see the full range all at once either. That’s why cameras often need adjusted exposures or multiple shots to capture both bright objects and faint stars in the same image.

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  "content": "Here’s a visual test you can do without any equipment. Go out during a full Moon night and see how many stars you can see. Take a mental picture. Then about a month later, go to the same place during a New Moon (basically no Moon in the sky) and compare how many stars you can see. You’ll notice far more stars during the New Moon because the bright Moon washes out the fainter ones.\n\nIt’s a similar principle in photography. When there’s a very bright light source in the frame, it can overwhelm the scene and make faint objects like stars much harder to capture in a single exposure, because the dynamic range can exceed what the camera can handle at once. While the human eye can adapt to different light levels over time better than a camera, it doesn’t see the full range all at once either. That’s why cameras often need adjusted exposures or multiple shots to capture both bright objects and faint stars in the same image.",
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