Alan LaVern
Bean, the fourth human to walk on the Moon, has died at the age of 86.
Following reports that he had passed away, the news was confirmed today by
NASA. Bean was born on March 15, 1932 in Wheeler, Texas. In 1963, he was
selected by NASA to become an astronaut as part of their third group of
astronauts.
After
serving as a backup on the Gemini 10 and Apollo 9 missions, Bean got his first
flight to space on Apollo 12 as the lunar module pilot. On November 19, 1969,
he and Pete Conrad became the third and fourth people to set foot on the Moon.
In an interview with NPR in 2014, Bean described the experience as being “like science fiction”. He said it was “hard for me to believe,” adding: "I would look down and say, 'This is the moon, this is the moon,' and I would look up and say, 'That's the Earth, that's the Earth,' in my head.”
The mission
was not without incident. 30 seconds after launching on a Saturn V rocket from
Kennedy Space Center, the rocket was hit by lightning.
And then, 30
seconds later, it was hit by lightning again, with Bean describing alarms
blaring as they flew into space. Thankfully, the mission was not aborted.
Conrad and Bean spent more than 10 hours on the Moon in a region called the
Ocean of Storms, during which time they walked to the Surveyor 3 probe, a
previous unmanned mission that had landed on the Moon. They also collected rocks,
conducted experiments, and took numerous photographs.
This was not
Bean’s only mission to space. In June 1973 he was part of the second crewed
mission (called Skylab 3) to the US space station Skylab, along with Owen
Garriott and Jack Lousma. They spent 59 days in space, a record that was
eclipsed months later by the Skylab 4 mission.
Bean
resigned from NASA in June 1981, having spent a total of 1,671 hours and 45
minutes in space. He used his subsequent time to work on art in his studio at
home, even using moon dust and pieces of his spacesuit in paintings that were
given to him by NASA. And he really liked to draw the Moon.
“I'm the only artist in all of history that… can paint that thing,” he told the Washington Post in 2009.
Following
the death of Bean, there are now just four astronauts who have walked on the
Moon left alive – Buzz Aldrin, David Scott, Charlie Duke, and Jack Schmitt.
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