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Apollo 40th Anniversary Morning Television

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Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean responds to a question during a live television interview on Monday, July 20, 2009, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Bean was lunar module pilot on Apollo 12, man's second lunar landing. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

Apollo 12 launched from Cape Kennedy on Nov. 14, 1969, into a cloudy, rain-swept sky. The flight plan for Apollo 12 was similar to that of Apollo 11, except Apollo 12 was to fly a higher inclination to the lunar equator and leave the free-return trajectory after the second translunar midcourse correction. Prior to lunar orbit insertion, a telecast was made to Earth on Nov. 17, showing the Earth, moon, spacecraft interior and intravehicular transfer of the crew. Later that day, when Apollo 12 went behind the moon at about 97 miles up, the first lunar orbit insertion burn began. The burn lasted for about six minutes, placing the spacecraft into an elliptical orbit of 69 by 195 miles. On Nov. 19, with the LM behind the moon in the 14th orbit, and some 109 hours, 23 minutes into the mission, the descent orbit insertion maneuver began. With Conrad controlling the descent semi-manually for the last 500 feet, a precision landing occurred at about 110 hours, 32 minutes into the mission, and closer to the target than expected. Intrepid landed in the Ocean of Storms at 3 degrees, 11 hours, 51 minutes south, and 23 degrees, 23 minutes, and 7.5 seconds west. Landing was about 120 feet northeast of Head Crater, and about 535 feet northwest from where Surveyor III stood in its crater. Apollo 12 touched down approximately 950 miles west of where Apollo 11 had landed. Three hours after the landing and before the first extravehicular activity or, EVA, began. Richard Gordon, orbiting 69 miles up in the Yankee Clipper, was able to see both the Intrepid and Surveyor through the use of a 28-power sextant telescope. Conrad opened Intrepid's hatch at 115 hours, 10 minutes into the mission to begin the first lunar EVA for the Apollo 12 crew. In their first lunar exploration, Conrad spent three hours, 39 minutes outside Intrepid, and Bean logged two hours, 58 minutes on the lurain. Crew Charles Conrad Jr., Commander Alan L. Bean, Lunar Module Pilot Richard F. Gordon Jr., Command Module Pilot

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alan bean apollo 12 apollo program astronaut nasa headquarters washington dc hq nasa paul e alers apollo anniversary television high resolution astronauts nasa
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19/07/2009
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Apollo 12 - All Images

Apollo 12, the second manned mission to land on the Moon.
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Residence Inn Washington. Dc C ,  38.88320, -77.01588
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NASA
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https://images.nasa.gov/
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Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Alan Bean, Apollo 12, Nasa Paul E Alers

Expedition 22 Launch Day. NASA public domain image colelction.

An inspector examines an integrated circuit chip on a printed control board as repair technicians are demonstrated on a television monitor at the Fleet Mine Warfare Training Center (FMWTC). The center, the only one of its kind in the Navy, trains new recruits as well as experienced Sailors in areas such as mine assembly, fire fighting, damage control, minehunter operations, computer board repair and leadership/management programs

STS069-347-034 - STS-069 - Astronaut Gernhardt on middeck

STS064-82-052 - STS-064 - Bulkhead television camera on Discovery's aft payload bay

STS 121 PRESENTATION BY ASTRONAUT PIERS SELLERS

Topi Gerdt, YLE finnish broadcasting company

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - In the Space Station Processing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, STS-115 Mission Specialist Daniel Burbank is practicing folding a sequential shunt unit launch to activation multilayer installation blanket. Burbank and other crew members are at the center for Crew Equipment Interface Test activities. Equipment familiarization is a routine part of astronaut training and launch preparations. The mission will deliver the second port truss segment, the P3/P4 Truss, to attach to the first port truss segment, the P1 Truss, as well as deploy solar array set 2A and 4A. Launch on Space Shuttle Atlantis is scheduled for late August. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett KSC-06pd1181

STS055-233-016 - STS-055 - Crewmember in the D-2 Spacelab during Closed Circuit Television broadcast.

STS069-301-019 - STS-069 - Astronaut Gernhardt on middeck

AS12-47-6893 - Apollo 12 - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

AS12-49-7266 - Apollo 12 - Public domain NASA photogrpaph

NASA NATIONAL AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM 2009 EVENT

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alan bean apollo 12 apollo program astronaut nasa headquarters washington dc hq nasa paul e alers apollo anniversary television high resolution astronauts nasa