by Ann » Mon Nov 19, 2018 8:42 am
jojo.dodo wrote: ↑Mon Nov 19, 2018 6:31 am
Very nice photo... but...
Something shocked me with this picture and thinking about what it can be, if fact I realized that it's impossible to take such king of photo without post-processing... the albedo of moon is less than 0.1 and in this photo the moon seems as bright as snow... Can the author explain what he really did ?
A gibbous Moon over snowy mountains.
Photo: Göran Strand.
Snowy mountains and a faint Moon.
Credit: dzamikhoff
I guess you think that the Moon is too bright in today's APOD compared with the snowy mountains, in view of the fact that the Moon is really so intrinsically dark (like asphalt, in fact) while the snow is white?
How can the dark moon and the white snow seem to be equally bright in today's APOD?
The short answer is that most of the Moon is brightly lit by the Sun in the APOD, while the mountains are in darkness. The Sun had set at the time and place where this picture was taken, and the landscape was dark. I guess that the mountains must be lit up by
something, but not by anything even remotely as bright as the Sun.
In the other picture that I posted, the snow-clad mountains are indeed lit up by the Sun. The snowy mountains are brightly lit and the Sun-facing parts of them look mostly brilliantly white. A pale Moon can be seen in the sky, and I think that at least part of it is sunlit. Why does it look so dark compared with the snow-clad mountains?
Why, because because both are sunlit, but the Moon is intrinsically so much darker than the snow, of course. But a sunlit Moon will look brighter than snow-clad mountains in the night.
Ann
[quote=jojo.dodo post_id=287432 time=1542609070]
Very nice photo... but...
Something shocked me with this picture and thinking about what it can be, if fact I realized that it's impossible to take such king of photo without post-processing... the albedo of moon is less than 0.1 and in this photo the moon seems as bright as snow... Can the author explain what he really did ?
[/quote]
[float=left][img2]https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1811/GibbousMoon_Strand_1500.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]A gibbous Moon over snowy mountains.
Photo: Göran Strand.[/size][/c][/float][float=right][img2]https://ak5.picdn.net/shutterstock/videos/1007036125/thumb/1.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Snowy mountains and a faint Moon.
Credit: dzamikhoff[/size][/c][/float]
I guess you think that the Moon is too bright in today's APOD compared with the snowy mountains, in view of the fact that the Moon is really so intrinsically dark (like asphalt, in fact) while the snow is white?
How can the dark moon and the white snow seem to be equally bright in today's APOD?
The short answer is that most of the Moon is brightly lit by the Sun in the APOD, while the mountains are in darkness. The Sun had set at the time and place where this picture was taken, and the landscape was dark. I guess that the mountains must be lit up by [i]something[/i], but not by anything even remotely as bright as the Sun.
In the other picture that I posted, the snow-clad mountains are indeed lit up by the Sun. The snowy mountains are brightly lit and the Sun-facing parts of them look mostly brilliantly white. A pale Moon can be seen in the sky, and I think that at least part of it is sunlit. Why does it look so dark compared with the snow-clad mountains?
Why, because because both are sunlit, but the Moon is intrinsically so much darker than the snow, of course. But a sunlit Moon will look brighter than snow-clad mountains in the night.
Ann