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Alan LaVerne Bean Astronaut
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Born: March 15, 1932
Birth Place: Wheeler, Texas
Date Joined NASA: October 17, 1963
Date Left NASA: February 26, 1981
Space Flights: 2
Time in Space: 69.66 days
Number of EVAs: 4
Total EVA Time: 10.53 hours
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Alan Bean
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MISSION ASSIGNMENTS
- Gemini 10
Assignment: Backup Crew
- Apollo 9
Assignment: Backup Crew
- Apollo 12
Assignment: Prime Crew Flight Duration: 10.19 days
- Skylab 3
Assignment: Prime Crew Flight Duration: 59.46 days
- Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Assignment: Backup Crew
HIGHLIGHTS
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Earned a Bachelor of Science degree in aeronautical
engineering from the University of Texas in 1955.
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After graduating from the ROTC Bean was commissioned in
the US Navy and assigned to a jet attack squadron at the
Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Florida. After a
four-year tour, he attended the Navy Test Pilot School
and thereafter flew several types of new Navy aircraft
as a test pilot.
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Selected by NASA in the third group of astronauts in
1963. Bean was on the backup crews of Gemini 10 and
Apollo 9 before being assigned the Lunar Module
Pilot of Apollo 12.
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Became the fourth man on the Moon on November 19, 1969.
During two excursions onto the lunar surface, Bean and
Charles Conrad deployed surface experiments powered by
the first nuclear thermal generator deployed on the
moon. Their pinpoint landing allowed them to inspect an
unmanned Surveyor spacecraft that landed there two years
earlier. They collected and returned 30 kg of rocks and
lunar soil for study on Earth.
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Bean commanded the second manned Skylab mission, Skylab
3, launched on July 28, 1973. The other crew members
were Science Pilot Owen Garriott and Command Module
pilot Jack Lousma. They would spend 59 days aboard the
space workshop. On the third EVA of the mission, Bean
and Garriott installed a new set of gyroscopes to
replace failed units. During the course of the mission
Earth resources photography, solar astronomy, metals
processing and biological experiments were conducted.
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Bean retired from the Navy in 1975 but continued with
NASA as head of the Astronaut Candidate Operations and
Training Group. He retired from NASA in 1981 and
thereafter became a space painter of some repute.
Information provided by Mark Wades Encyclopedia Astronautica
http://www.friends-partners.org/mwade/spaceflt.htm
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