
Ich habe dieses Video an meinen Freund geschickt. Was er nicht versteht, ist, dass der Astronaut im Weltraum ist. Es ist schwarz, sagen wir, sie haben es nachts gefilmt, nicht am Abend, warum ist die Sonne nicht sichtbar, warum ist sie schwarz und wenn die Sonne 149,6 Millionen km von der Erde entfernt ist, warum können wir dann keine Lichtreflexionen sehen? Warum konzentriert es sich nur auf die Erde und der Weltraum ist schwarz?
https://youtu.be/Hz2F_S3Tl0Y?si=OkJ4KimmpN3BtRfW
5 Kommentare
1. You can’t see the sun, because the camera isn’t facing it.
2. You can’t see stars because the Earth is too bright.
Ask them what they see when they photograph a sunrise/sunset. It’s kind of the inverse problem where everything else is so bright, it blows out what would otherwise be viable if it was dark.
Tell him to go outside on a clear night, take out his phone, set it to pro photo mode and point it at a streetlamp with the sky in the background and snap a pic.
There’s no air to scatter the light. You can only see light that’s coming toward you.
>What he doesn’t understand is that the astronaut is in space, It’s black, let’s say they filmed it at night, not in the evening, why is the sun not visible, why is it black & if the sun is 149.6 million km away from the Earth, why can’t we see light reflections?Â
The sky is blue because the atmosphere bends the suns light and this creates the blue effect. Its bright as it reflects light from the Sun, when there is too little atmosphere, the sky goes dark. This happens in the high stratosphere.
In the video you do see light being reflected from the surface but not the atmosphere. You do not see stars as they are faint and the cameras appeture is set to very low due to the huge amount of sunlight, to set it to be able to see stars you would be overwhelmed by the brightness of the Sun.
I may have misunderstood your questions.