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NASA-UAP-D6, Apollo 17 Technical Crew Debriefing, 1973
? PDF RELEASE 2026-05-08 โŒฅ 332 WORDS OCR

NASA-UAP-D6, Apollo 17 Technical Crew Debriefing, 1973

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This document is an excerpt from the Apollo 17 Technical Crew Debriefing dated January 4, 1973, produced by NASA's Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. It records statements from the three-man crew โ€” Commander Eugene Cernan, Command Module Pilot Ronald Evans, and Lunar Module Pilot Harrison Schmitt โ€” concerning unusual visual observations during the mission. Schmitt reported experiencing light flashes nearly continuously throughout the flight while dark-adapted, including one he believed occurred on the lunar surface. He noted the flashes ceased during the ALFMED experiment when blindfolds were worn, then resumed afterward. The document was originally marked Confidential and has been declassified under E.O. 13526.

The light flashes Schmitt describes are consistent with a known phenomenon โ€” cosmic ray interactions with the retina or optic nerve โ€” documented across multiple Apollo missions. The inclusion of this debriefing in the PURSUE UAP release suggests NASA or reviewing agencies flagged crew visual anomaly reports for this program. No significant redactions are apparent in the excerpt. The document's agency is listed as unknown in the release metadata, despite clear NASA provenance on the cover page.

Apollo 17 was the ninth crewed U.S. mission to the Moon, and the sixth to land Astronauts on the lunar surface. This document is an excerpt from the Apollo 17 Technical Crew Debriefing on January 4, 1973, in which astronaut Harrison Schmitt reported seeing light flashes. โ€ข Page 24-4. [Lunar Module Pilot Harrison Schmitt]: โ€œWe had light flashes just about continuously during the whole flight when we were dark adapted. I had one which I thought was a flash on the lunar surface. That one period of time when we had the blindfolds on for the ALFMED [Apollo Light Flash Moving Emulsion Detector] experiment there were just no visible flashes, although that evening, that night, before I went to sleep, I noticed that I was seeing the light flashes again.โ€
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264 p CUNPIDERITAL MSC-07631 NASA NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION APOLLO 17 TECHNICAL CREW DEBRIEFING JANUARY 4, 1973 PREPARED BY TRAINING OFFICE CREW TRAINING AND SIMULATION DIVISION This document will automatically become declassified 90 days from the published date. NOTICE: This document may be exempt from public disclosure under the Freedom of Infor- mation Act (5 U.S.C. 552). Requests for its release to persons outside the U.S. Govern- ment should be handled under the provisions of NASA Policy Directive 1382.2. MANNED SPACECRAFT CENTER HOUSTON.TEXAS PGM SUBJECT INDEXING BATA DATE 14 73 M. โ€ข 07621 SIGNATOR LOC DECLASSIFIED B.O. 13526, Sec 3.3(a) NASA Declassification Guide Date of Guide: (M) 05 (Y) 2026 Reviewer: r3 Date 56/2026

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24-4 EVANS ( CONT ' D) CERNAN EVANS SCHMITT โ€ขCONADENT after the brightness of the fireball decreased, I could look back up through the rendezvous window and see what to me was kind of like a tunnel with a bright spot in the middle of the tunnel. Way down the tunnel, way back behind, I could see the fireball. The only unusual sighting I can recall during landing or recovery is when the CMP looked out the window and saw the superstructure of an aircraft carrier and said, "Oh, we've got a tin can with us." Well, it was kind of foggy on the windows. Transearth we had only a small crescent of an Earth and it was not feasible to do any extensive weather observations. had light flashes just about continuously during the whole flight when we were dark adapted. I had one which I thought was a flash on the lunar surface. That one period of time when we had the blindfolds on for the ALFMED experiment there were just no visible flashes, although that evening, that night, before I went to sleep I noticed that I was seeing the light flashes again. So, it just seemed to be that one interval either side of it where the light flash was not visible to myself or to the other two crewmen.