by iamlucky13 » Wed Jan 23, 2008 6:34 pm
NoelC wrote:Yes, that's a cool shot.
I'd sure be tempted to take off the visor and clean it... OOOOPS!
Is the camera - and indeed everything out there - wrapped in white stuff to fend off the unfiltered (by atmosphere) sunshine? You never see them just shooting with a dSLR - all the gear always has that "made for space" look to it.
-Noel
I would assume yes. Dark objects can get pretty hot in space, with the sun beating down at 1300 W/m^2 and no air to conduct heat away. Cooling is radiative only.
At first I thought it was a "made-for-space" camera due to the temperature extremes and the difficulty of pushing small buttons in thick gloves, but I poked around a little bit, and it looks like a Kodak DCS760 wrapped in insulation and probably with a modified shutter button. Here's a page about astronaut photography:
http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/sseop/metadata/camera.htm
I'm wondering if the marks on the helmet are scratches from being bumped around in storage and handling, or smears from skin oil of whoever helped Mr. Anderson don his suit.
Hmm...no complaints yet about how this image isn't astronomy related?
[quote="NoelC"]Yes, that's a cool shot.
I'd sure be tempted to take off the visor and clean it... OOOOPS!
Is the camera - and indeed everything out there - wrapped in white stuff to fend off the unfiltered (by atmosphere) sunshine? You never see them just shooting with a dSLR - all the gear always has that "made for space" look to it.
-Noel[/quote]
I would assume yes. Dark objects can get pretty hot in space, with the sun beating down at 1300 W/m^2 and no air to conduct heat away. Cooling is radiative only.
At first I thought it was a "made-for-space" camera due to the temperature extremes and the difficulty of pushing small buttons in thick gloves, but I poked around a little bit, and it looks like a Kodak DCS760 wrapped in insulation and probably with a modified shutter button. Here's a page about astronaut photography:
http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/sseop/metadata/camera.htm
I'm wondering if the marks on the helmet are scratches from being bumped around in storage and handling, or smears from skin oil of whoever helped Mr. Anderson don his suit.
Hmm...no complaints yet about how this image isn't astronomy related?