Stars Sky

Stars Sky
How is it that all photos taken of the Moon landings are not stars in the sky?

we have an atmosphere in the ground, so it has sense that sometimes we can not see stars. But on the moon, as far as I know, there is no atmosphere and no clouds. This leaves me to assume the skies would be so clear in the space [of] the moon that could see more stars than anywhere in the world. This is not the case, however. I am looking for a logical explanation scientific is not a conspiracy theory. Thank you.

You can not see the stars in the photographs because they are too dim. Although the sky is black in space is still broad daylight. The sky is not brilliant, because there is no air for the sun to light, but astronauts, soil and everything else is as bright as day in the Earth. Taking an image that does not dodge the ground lit and people make the faint stars to be very, very low risk. You get the same effect as taking a picture at night artificial light. It is actually quite difficult to photograph the stars, even on a clear dark night. Try a little time. You will need a longer exposure time the camera can do, and if artificially lit accidentally some things in the picture will be overexposed bright white spots.

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