I looked with total disbelief at the Moon images released by NASA as the Artemis II spacecraft is just a few thousand miles from the Moon rather than a quarter of a million miles. The images are blurry with low contrast and no detail and are worse than the ones I get in my own backyard with a cheap 70mm refractor.
The reason for this is they are using what is essentially a Go-Pro Hero 4 to take their moon photos. Which as we all know is completely the wrong type of camera for that purpose. They are going into a rare Moon Solar Eclipse situation with virtually no optical imaging equipment up to the job.
The Mission Briefing touched on the subject and the NASA lady responsible for fielding that question did not appear to know what optical imaging equipment they had available. She also said it would take them at least six months to process the high definition images they did capture before public release. This is ridiculous. If NASA released the raw optical images to the public, I am sure the astrophotography experts here could release excellent images in a few days.
She mentioned that, because of the Solar Eclipse on the mission, the astronauts had been given a “few days” training in taking Eclipse photos with a hand held camera through a thick perspex window. I think we can deduce from that that the only Hi Definition cameras on the mission are the hand held Nikon D5 20 megapixel cameras which were added as an afterthought.
Extremely bad mission planning in my view.

A very nice picture that could have been of significant scientific interest if taken with proper scientific equipment. As it happens the stars are little streaks due to camera shake and the corona has virtually no detail, which is probably due to Canon camera internal smoothing routines. Pretty but useless. 