@TJ_Cooney How come there's no floaties in this photo but they're shown in subsequent pics after the craft was loaded on the ship? Are you certain this photo is genuine?
@stefnox@WhiteHouse@NASA You know, that's on me. I keep forgetting to not interact with brain-dead people on the Internet. Wasting my time for no reason at all.
THE ARTEMIS II ECLIPSE.
April 6, 2026.
Totality, beyond Earth. From lunar orbit, the Moon eclipses the Sun, revealing a view few in human history have ever witnessed. Photo: NASA
@stefnox@WhiteHouse@NASA "Should probably try getting the shot before writing the legend". They got the shot. Then wrote this post. If that's not what you're talking about, then I don't know what else that could mean. Enlighten me.
@intorabbitholes@WhiteHouse@NASA This photo was taken with a longer shutter speed and probably higher ISO since the only light was the stars/planets, the solar corona, and earthshine.
If the camera had the same settings as a daylight picture on earth, you'd just see darkness.
@Official_Antony@SundaeDivine@WhiteHouse@NASA Good, NASA has been hemorrhaging funds for some time now, while commercial launch providers actually get stuff done. Artemis II launched 3 years late and way over budget.
@GregAWK81@SystemGenocide@WhiteHouse@NASA If a camera gets set with sensitivity high enough to see the stars, the brightness of the moon or spacecraft in the frame is so intense that the whole image sensor gets blown out to white. It's like shining a flashlight at your face and trying to read a book behind the flashlight
@pacificapilot2@WhiteHouse@NASA Nibiru and it’s 14 million mile debris-ridden tail. This is where all the meteor’s lately and rainbow clouds are coming from