How many Hasselblad's are on the Moon?

about to extinct

D
about to extinct

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Fantasyland!

D
Fantasyland!

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  • 2
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perfect cirkel

D
perfect cirkel

  • 2
  • 1
  • 124
Thomas J Walls cafe.

A
Thomas J Walls cafe.

  • 4
  • 8
  • 298

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Worker 11811

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...Frozen bits also can act as meteors striking with enough force to injure an astronaut...

Now, there's a strange thought!

"News Flash: This just in... Space shuttle astronaut killed by flying crap-sicle while on spacewalk!... Film at eleven!"

:blink:
 
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JayGannon

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There was a lot of "contraband" aboard every space flight, and some items just vanished appearing later in the hands of project members.

Including 1 camera that is supposedly still on the moon but is actually in the hands of a private collector in California.
 

lxdude

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Worker 11811

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Don't you think the dark side of the moon would be dark enough?

You can't be guaranteed that it will stay dark.

First, even if it is very dark on the dark side of the moon, I wouldn't say that the "dark side" is totally dark. Just dark-er. Then you would have to deal with reflected light, star light and light from comets or other heavenly objects.

Finally, how would you deal with some idiot who might walk up with a flashlight and say, "Hey! What are you doing over there?"

That all begs the question that you need a clean area to work in. You'd have to build an enclosure anyway. Therefore, you'd just as well build your darkroom wherever it's most convenient. If you're going to go through all the trouble to build a darkroom, it would be silly if you built it out of glass.
 

Photo Engineer

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Every 28 days (or so) the back side of the moon is fully illuminated by full sunlight and the front side becomes dark. This alternates and so there is no "dark side". Open trays of process solutions or tanks will boil on the moon unless the air pressure is high enough around it to prevent it. So, unless you build a pressurized process area, there will be no analog on the moon.

OTOH, you can't easily print with ink jets there either for the same reason. :wink: You need air pressure to prevent either clogging of the jet openings or the ink just spraying out all over the place.

You have to wait until you return to earth or you have to send the images back electronically.

PE
 

mopar_guy

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Why not send the film to the lab in a mailer?

Also, sign up for the Postcard Exchange.
 

MattKing

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I bet the Alternative Processes people here would like working on the moon - at least the ones who need UV light for their work :smile:.
 

Edward_S

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I was interested to see this in the '50 Years Ago' section of a recent copy of Sky and Telescope magazine:

"On October 4, 1959, the Soviet Union launched its third cosmic rocket [...] Photographing the surface of the other side of the moon was begun [...] at 3:30 Universal time on October 7th, at a distance of 65,200 kilometers from the moon's centre [...] When a photograph had been made, the miniature camera developed, fixed and dried the specially prepared 35-mm film that was used to allow processing at a very high temperature."

So developing film on the far side of the moon has already been done!
 

BrianShaw

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Finally, how would you deal with some idiot who might walk up with a flashlight and say, "Hey! What are you doing over there?"

I once thought the most dangerous thing on earth was a 2nd Lieutenant with a compass... and now I find the most dangerous thing is a lunar idiot with a flashlight. Live and Learn! :blink:
 

PentaxBronica

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I once thought the most dangerous thing on earth was a 2nd Lieutenant with a compass... and now I find the most dangerous thing is a lunar idiot with a flashlight. Live and Learn! :blink:

I've always wondered how the war photographer (was it Robert Capa or did the story just get attached to him?) who supposedly developed his films in the field by dunking them through his helmet on a moonless night managed to avoid that problem...
 

bblhed

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At 10^-10 tor, the moon is no place for liquids And you don't want to be processing outside on the ride home either because the area between the earth and the moon the vacuum is 10^-12 tor. I can't resist saying "that sucks".
 

lxdude

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At 10^-10 tor, the moon is no place for liquids And you don't want to be processing outside on the ride home either because the area between the earth and the moon the vacuum is 10^-12 tor. I can't resist saying "that sucks".
Hmmm. When I want to clean my rug, I use a vacuum cleaner. It doesn't create nearly as much of a vacuum as that. So with that much vacuum, why is the moon so dusty?:confused::confused:
 

Photo Engineer

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Just as an aside on flashlights, I used to keep a set of flashlights in my DR at Kodak, with filter sets for ortho, pan and min-pan as well as color. We got them from our stockroom. Some had snoods on them for directional work. So, what is the problem with flashlights in the DR?

It is necessary to have air! Flashlights as safelights are a luxury item but doable.

PE
 

Worker 11811

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Well, yeah, that was supposed to be a silly example.

But, since the moon is supposed to contain a subterranean base for alien space ships, one of those silly Martians (you know, the ones with the shoeshine brushes on their helmets) could come up and detonate his Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator. That would make you angry... Very, VERY angry!

:tongue:
 

Edward_S

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Hmmm. When I want to clean my rug, I use a vacuum cleaner. It doesn't create nearly as much of a vacuum as that. So with that much vacuum, why is the moon so dusty?:confused::confused:

If you ran your vacuum cleaner on the surface of the moon, would the dust go in or out?
 

benjiboy

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I once thought the most dangerous thing on earth was a 2nd Lieutenant with a compass... and now I find the most dangerous thing is a lunar idiot with a flashlight. Live and Learn! :blink:
It's almost as dangerous as a 2nd Lieutenant with a map. :smile:
 
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Marvin

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You can see the Lunar Lander base and its shadow on Google Moon and you can zoom in on the different landing sites.
 
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