NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969
The released record says astronaut Alan L. Bean observed particles and flashes of light 'sailing off in space' via the onboard Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT). File: NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969. NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969 combines an official, downloadable document, 4 extracted claims, 2 evidence records, and 6 timeline entries across 4 source pages, and file-level provenance that can be compared with related release records.
- File
- Document · Release 01
- Date
- 1969
- Location
- Moon
- Extent
- 4 pages
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Probed Assessment
The released record says astronaut Alan L. Bean observed particles and flashes of light 'sailing off in space' via the onboard Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT). File: NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969.
Key takeaways
- The released record says charles 'Pete' Conrad observed floating debris outside the lunar module, illuminated by the module’s onboard tracking light.
- The released record says the tracking light on the lunar module burnt out.
- The released record says conrad assessed that the tracking light had burnt out because he could no longer see the debris from the module.
Why it matters
NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969 combines an official, downloadable document, 4 extracted claims, 2 evidence records, and 6 timeline entries across 4 source pages, and file-level provenance that can be compared with related release records.
Corroboration
For NASA-UAP-D001, Apollo 12 Transcript, 1969, the release establishes official provenance but does not independently verify the record's statement that astronaut Alan L. Bean observed particles and flashes of light 'sailing off in space' via the onboard Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT).
Open questions
- • Which companion records, if any, independently corroborate the source claims extracted from this 4-page document?
Probed separates this editorial assessment from the source claims below. It summarizes what the released artifact supports; it is not independent verification.
Official Description from War.gov
Apollo 12 was the fourth crewed U.S. mission to the Moon and the second to land astronauts on the lunar surface. This document is an excerpt from the Apollo 12 Technical Air-to-Ground Voice Transcription, November 1969, highlighting two periods in which astronauts reported observing unidentified phenomenon: a one hour period on the fifth day, and a two minute period on the sixth day. These transcripts contain contemporaneous observations by the flight crew reacting to unidentified phenomenon. • Day 05, Hour 19, Minute 14, Second 58 through Day 05, Hour 20, Minute 12, Second 14: o At 05:19:27:25, the pilot of the Lunar Module (LMP-LM), Astronaut Alan L. Bean, described observing particles and flashes of light “sailing off in space” via the onboard Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT). He characterized these phenomenon as “escaping the Moon.” • Day 06, Hour 00, Minute 21, Second 42 through Day 06, Hour 00, Minute 23, Second 33: o Mission Commander, Charles “Pete” Conrad, described observing floating debris outside the lunar module, which had been illuminated by the module’s onboard tracking light. At 06:00:21:51, Conrad assessed that the tracking light had burnt out because he could no longer see the debris from the module.
Preserved verbatim as source metadata. This wording is separate from Probed’s file-specific description and assessment.
File Context
Related entities
Release provenance
- Release
- Release 01
- Official ID
- release-01-file-138-nasa-uap-d001-apollo-12-transcript-1969
- Cleared
- May 8, 2026
Referenced Timeline
Start of observation period by Alan L. Bean
Alan L. Bean observed particles and flashes of light.
LinkedAlan L BeanAlan Bean observes unidentified phenomenon
Alan Bean described observing particles and flashes of light 'sailing off in space'.
End of observation period by Alan L. Bean
LinkedAlan L BeanStart of observation period by Charles 'Pete' Conrad
Charles 'Pete' Conrad observed floating debris.
LinkedCharles 'pete' ConradPete Conrad observes floating debris
Pete Conrad described observing floating debris outside the lunar module.
LinkedLunar ModuleEnd of observation period by Charles 'Pete' Conrad
LinkedCharles 'pete' Conrad
Source Claims
Claims are attributed to the released source and remain distinct from Probed’s assessment and tracker findings.
Astronaut Alan L. Bean observed particles and flashes of light 'sailing off in space' via the onboard Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT).
When you look out the AOT in the dark quadrant? You can see these lights - particles of light. flash~s of light just seem to come from - in this case, I'm looking in quadrant 1 which is the left one. It's coming :from behind…
Charles 'Pete' Conrad observed floating debris outside the lunar module, illuminated by the module’s onboard tracking light.
Hey, Houston. It looks like our tracking llght's burned out. Dick hasn't been able to find us in this sextant. And on the first nightside pass we had little bits and pieces floating along vith us and we could tell that the tracking light va…
The tracking light on the lunar module burnt out.
Hey, Houston. It looks like our tracking llght's burned out.
Conrad assessed that the tracking light had burnt out because he could no longer see the debris from the module.
tracking light va.; flashing on them. And we still have, I've presumed to think, bits and pieces floating along and nothing' s flashing on them, so I'm pretty sure it burned out.
Source Material & Evidence
Research Map
Lines appear only when two entities share a row-level source claim or dated timeline event. Unconnected nodes remain visible without implying a relationship.