I think people conflate pointing out NASA fakery with preaching some over-arching philosophy on the nature of the physical world. I'm only interested in deconstructing NASA's blatant lies. I find the practicalities of their whole schtick fascinating, and I really enjoy reading someone methodically dismantling it.
This guy's articles are not to be missed. This is number 54.
For more than forty years now, it has not been possible to get an answer to a seemingly simple question - what color is the sky and what is the actual color of Mars?
The article I linked in my other comment goes into detail how, based on NASA's own color guide which is mounted on the rover's chassis in view of it's camera, their images of Mars appear to be deliberately tinted (in the early days orange-red; lately yellow-green).
The author, who is a camera specialist and was also involved in the field of color correction and chemistry in the film-world for years, shows how when the colors are corrected in photoshop; based on the manufacturers specifications of that color guide, available knowledge of NASA cameras, and another lines of inquiry; the result is usually like the first image on the left; terrestrial looking with a hazy blue sky.
The CG department in Nasa needs to get its act together.
Strong presence anything related to NASA fraud going to get shill downvoted. Don't you know u/clemaneuverers ?
I think people conflate pointing out NASA fakery with preaching some over-arching philosophy on the nature of the physical world. I'm only interested in deconstructing NASA's blatant lies. I find the practicalities of their whole schtick fascinating, and I really enjoy reading someone methodically dismantling it.
This guy's articles are not to be missed. This is number 54.
Does NASA show the real color of Mars if we know how the "Martian" camera works? (link google translated from Russian to English)
Original untranslated link
Or Devon Island in Canada: https://www.space.com/31312-mock-mars-mission-devon-island.html
The article I linked in my other comment goes into detail how, based on NASA's own color guide which is mounted on the rover's chassis in view of it's camera, their images of Mars appear to be deliberately tinted (in the early days orange-red; lately yellow-green).
The author, who is a camera specialist and was also involved in the field of color correction and chemistry in the film-world for years, shows how when the colors are corrected in photoshop; based on the manufacturers specifications of that color guide, available knowledge of NASA cameras, and another lines of inquiry; the result is usually like the first image on the left; terrestrial looking with a hazy blue sky.