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Episodes Tagged with "Bean"

Posted on December 6, 2017

At NASA Headquarters, George Mueller and other planners created a far-reaching plan that Administrator Paine made even more ambitious in adapting it for Nixon’s Space Task Group. The task group’s timetable called for a twelve-man space station and a ...

P3-Surveyor 3

P2-Conrad-Gordon-Bean

P1-Apollo 12 Emblem

Posted on January 31, 2018

It was 68 degrees, overcast, and raining at Cape Kennedy on November 14, 1969. The ceiling was 2,100 feet and the winds were light. There was some discussion, while the astronauts were suiting-up, of scrubbing the launch, but that would mean ramping ...

P3-Apollo_12_launches_from_Kennedy_Space_Center

P2-Astronauts

P1-Nixon

Posted on February 14, 2018

It was impossible to check out the entire spacecraft; that could only be done on the ground. In the short time available, Griffin’s team ran a pre-maneuver check list, re-aligned the CSM platform, and discussed proceeding with the mission with the cre...

P3-A12 leaving Earth

P2-9b9_z

P1-S12-50-7325

Posted on February 21, 2018

At 83 hours mission elapsed time, the long lunar coast was almost over. It was time for the lunar orbit insertion burn. This burn would put Yankee Clipper and Intrepid into lunar orbit.

P-3

P2-Apollo_12_Snowman_a12-7f

P-1 Earth Rise A12

Posted on February 28, 2018

There was adrenaline in Pete Conrad’s voice as he counted down the last seconds before ignition. He and Bean were still weightless, but their bodies were secured to the cabin floor by harnesses. “Seven, six, five.”  Conrad pushed the PROCEED button o...

P3-Apollo 12 landing site photgraphed by LROC

P2-Apollo landing sites comparisom

P1-21081997133_0b0776ed7a_z

Posted on March 7, 2018

“Hey, there it is! There it is! Son of a gun, right down the middle of the road! Look out there! I can’t believe it! Fantastic!”  Pete Conrad when he saw his landing site.

P3-Landing legend

P2-jerry carr capcom for A12 landing

P1-Mission Control, Apollo 12- from l to r, director of flight operations Chris Kraft, flight director Gerry Griffin, and, third from right, in glasses, EECOM John Aaron

Posted on March 14, 2018

“The old Surveyor, yes sir. It can’t be any more than 600 feet from here. How about that?” (Pete Conrad.)

P3-AL Bean on footpad

P2-Al Bean on the porch

P1-Pete on ladder

Posted on March 21, 2018

According to the checklist, Bean was allowed 5 minutes to gain his balance and learn to walk on the Moon. Bean was amazed at his new buoyancy saying, “You can jump up in the air…”  But Conrad wanted to press on saying, “Hustle, boy, hustle! We’ve got...

P3-EVA1 checklist

P2-bean carrying alsep

P1-TV camera pointed at sun

Posted on March 28, 2018

Most of the remaining moon walk time was spent collecting rock samples, making surface observations such as the small mounds or hills, and taking pictures.

P3-Pete at the mesa AS12-47-6988

P2-HeAintHeavy by Al Bean

P1-Middle Cresent Crater

Posted on April 4, 2018

Pete and Al could not hear the excited shouts of the geologists in the back room down the hall from mission control, but they knew they had found something significant.

P3-Gnomon setup by al at head crater

P2-a12-lse76gsite4actual

P1-a12.hammocks

Posted on April 11, 2018

While Conrad led the way, Bean watched the ground for something interesting. It wasn’t easy to do field geology while running, and on the moon.

P3-Sharp Crater 3 AS12-49-7271

Apollo 12 Preliminary Science Report (346)

P1-Bench Crater partial plan AS12-49-7223

Posted on April 18, 2018

The problem with running into the sun was it was so bright that Conrad and Bean could not see the moon’s surface features until they were right on top of them.

P3-RockandRolling on the Ocean of Storms

P2-Al Bean near Halo crater

P1-EVA 2 Traverse

Posted on May 9, 2018

Conrad and Bean now walked north, up Surveyor Crater’s 14 degree slope. Fatigue set in as Pete and Al walked up the crater wall. The hand tool carrier was nearly full of rocks now and Bean felt the full weight of it.

P3

P2

P1

Posted on May 23, 2018

After a total of 31.6 hours on the moon, the Lunar Module ascent stage fired for about 7 minutes placing Intrepid into an orbit of 10 miles by 54 miles.

2-PostEVACabin CleanupA12Surf97

P3-Pan view out of the windows of LMa12pan1354548

P-112sur93

Posted on May 30, 2018

Dick Gordon opened the tunnel to Intrepid, saw his companions floating in a dirty cloud of moon dust, and slammed the hatch closed. He called out, “You guys ain’t gonna mess up my nice clean spacecraft!”

P3-lntrepid Descent stage

P2-docking

P1-rendezvous radar

Posted on June 6, 2018

Ten days ago, their Saturn V rocket had blasted Bean and his crew mates out of earth’s gravitational pull. Now their home planet was pulling them back at more than 24,000 miles per hour, twelve times faster than a high-speed rifle bullet. “Boy,” said...

P3-apollo12_mobilequarantine

P1-Apollo12splashdown

P1-mult1

Posted on November 2, 2022

Aside from physically training for the longest crewed missions that the United States had ever attempted, the actual training program was developed simultaneously with the hardware and experiments for the mission.

2-Pete Conrad Training

3-PeteTrainingMDA in Skylab Trainer Jsc

1-Skylab2PrelaunchTraining

Posted on November 16, 2022

The backup crew and some support crew participated in an interesting rescue scenario with 2 astronauts flying to Skylab to take back the crew of 3 onboard Skylab. This would mean 5 astronauts returning to earth in the command module.

1-Neutral_Buoyancy_Simulator_upper_level

3-3rdCrewMissionTrainingatJSC

2-GibsonATM

Posted on October 23, 2014

The rotation rate checked out at 55 degrees per minute, and the crew could now test for a minute amount of artificial gravity. When they put a camera against the instrument panel and then let it go, it moved in a straight line to the rear of the cock...

Recovery of G11

mySuperLamePic_4b6522ec730b0c0a85b7ed20f7c4f00f

G11 parachute

Agena Tether Experiment