RocketSTEM Issue #10 - February 2015 | Page 15

If not first, second will do: pete conrad, alan bean & dick gordon Over the last 53 years of to regain power and continue manned spaceflight there has on with their mission. Unlike even been the opportunity the first landing on Apollo 11, to have a number of all Navy which touched down over crews fly a mission together. four miles from where the intended landing site was, Apollo 12, the second Apollo 12 intended to make a manned landing on the surprecise landing in the Ocean face of the Moon, was comof Storms on the Lunar Surmanded by Charles “Pete” face. One of their tasks was Conrad Jr. who was also a to retrieve a piece of an unNavy pilot before entering manned lander, Surveyor III, NASA. His fellow moonwalker, which had been there for over Alan Bean, also known as two and a half years. Conrad the Lunar Module Pilot, was piloted the Lunar Module, a Navy pilot also. Rounding named Intrepid, to a landing out the crew was Command just over 500 feet from SurveyModule Pilot Richard Gordon, or III. Conrad and Bean made and yes, yet another Navy two EVAs, spending over sevpilot. They were a very close en hours on the lunar surface. crew and were friends beThey deployed numerous exfore and after their mission. periments and sensors on the Apollo 12 launched on surface and returned about November 14, 1969 from Ken75 pounds of lunar rocks and nedy Space Center Pad 39-A. soil to the earth for study. One of the more memorable Crew of the Apollo 12 mission (from left): Charles “Pete” Conrad Jr., events occurred 52 seconds Conrad and Bean went on Richard Gordon Jr., and Alan Bean. Credit: NASA after launch when the rocket to command different missions was it by lightning, not once, aboard Skylab, America’s Command Module, to go offline. but twice. This caused all three fuel first orbiting space station while Flying on just their batteries in the cells, which provide power to the Gordon retired from NASA in 1972. Command Module, they were able Once around the block: scott kelly In order to better understand the side effects of a long duration spaceflight where the crew could be in microgravity for a year or more, NASA is currently preparing for a year-long mission aboard the International Space Station. Data from the mission should help NASA develop and/or validate countermeasures designed to reduce the effects of long exposures in space. This will help them with their goals of long duration Lunar missions and ultimately missions to Mars. Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail “Misha” Kornienko currently are scheduled to launch aboard a Soyuz rocket to the International Space Station in March of 2015 and they will stay aboard the outpost for nearly a full year. For Scott Kelly, a former Navy aviator, this will be his 4th spaceflight. STS-118 Commander CDR Scott Kelly posing for a photo near a window on the Space Shuttle Endeavour. The International Space Station ISS is visible behind him. Credit: NASA On STS-103 in 1999 he was the Pilot on Discovery on what was the 3rd Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission. On STS-118 he served as Commander of Space Shuttle Endeavour on a ISS servicing flight which delivered a third starboard truss segment to the outpost. He launched to the space station again in 2010 and served as the Flight Engineer for Expedition 25 before assuming the role of Commander on Expedition 26 after the departure of the Expedition 25 Commander. 13 www.RocketSTEM .org 13