
Apollo 12 - Wikipedia
Commander Pete Conrad studies the Surveyor 3 spacecraft, which had landed two years previously; the Apollo Lunar Module, Intrepid, can be seen at top right. Apollo 12 (November …
Apollo 12 - NASA
Oct 11, 2024 · The three astronauts named by NASA as the prime crew of the Apollo 12 lunar landing mission. Left to right are Charles Conrad Jr., Richard F. Gordon Jr., and Alan L. Bean. …
Apollo 12 - The Planetary Society
Apollo 12 Crew The prime crew of Apollo 12. From left to right: Commander Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., Command Module Pilot Richard F. Gordon Jr., and Lunar Module Pilot Alan L. …
Apollo 12 Fact Sheet - Spaceline
The Apollo 12 lunar landing occurred at 1:54:35 a.m. EST on November 19, 1969 in the Ocean of Storms. The landing took place less than 600 feet from the Surveyor 3 spacecraft, which had …
Apollo 12 - National Air and Space Museum
The Apollo 12 crew at Johnson Space Center, September 1969: Charles “Pete” Conrad Jr., commander; Richard “Dick” F. Gordon, command module pilot; and Alan L. Bean, lunar …
Apollo 12 Mission - Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI)
The following astronauts were the back-up crew for Apollo 12: David R. Scott (pilot of Gemini 8 and command module pilot on Apollo 9) was backup commander, Alfred M. Worden was the …
Apollo 12
Apollo 12 was the second mission in which humans walked on the lunar surface. Launch took place under cloudy, rain-swept skies on 14 November 1969 from Pad 39A at Kennedy Space …
Apollo 12 - Wikiwand
Apollo 12 (November 14–24, 1969) was the sixth crewed flight in the United States Apollo program and the second to land on the Moon. It was launched on November 14, 1969, by …
Apollo 12 Crew - NASA Science
May 13, 2013 · Portrait of the prime crew of the Apollo 12 lunar landing mission. From left to right they are: commander Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr., command module pilot Richard F. Gordon Jr. …
Apollo 12 and NASA - NHHC
Onboard the Apollo 12 spacecraft were astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., commander; Richard F. Gordon Jr., command module pilot; and Alan L. Bean, lunar module pilot.