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![[Apollo 12] THE FIRST SPACE SUN ECLIPSE WITNESSED BY HUMANS Alan Bean, Pete Conrad or Richard Gordon, 14-24 November 1969 image 1](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-297-1.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
![[Apollo 12] THE FIRST SPACE SUN ECLIPSE WITNESSED BY HUMANS Alan Bean, Pete Conrad or Richard Gordon, 14-24 November 1969 image 2](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-297-3.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
![[Apollo 12] THE FIRST SPACE SUN ECLIPSE WITNESSED BY HUMANS Alan Bean, Pete Conrad or Richard Gordon, 14-24 November 1969 image 3](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-297-2.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
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From the mission transcript during the eclipse:
240:33:39 Gordon: We're getting a spectacular view at eclipse. We're using the Sun filter for the G&N optics, looking through, and it's unbelievable.
240:33:48 Weitz (Mission Control): Roger. Understand, Dick.
240:33:57 Gordon: The reason it looks so much different is the limb of the Earth is eclipsing it. It's not quite a straight line, but it's certainly a large, large disk right now. Looks quite a bit different than when you see the Moon eclipse the Sun.
240:34:15 Weitz: Roger.
240:34:18 Bean: Anybody down there know how—I—what we can set the camera at to use the Sun filter on it? To—to—take a couple of shots of this eclipse right through it?
240:34:31 Weitz: Stand by and we'll check.
240:34:35 Bean: They'd better hustle.
240:34:38 Weitz: Okay.
240:34:47 Bean: Funny thing is, you cannot see the Earth at all when you just shield your hand from the Sun and look out right next to it where the Earth should be. It's not there at all. When you stick your smoked glass up, you can see where it's cutting the Sun. Otherwise, it's completely invisible.
Literature
LIFE, 12 December 1969, p. 37 (variant)