OK, so I was
obsessing re-examining some photos for stars and stuff and came across this from Apollo 12: AS12-51-7588
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/images/print/AS12/51/7588.jpgIt is referred to in the photo index as a 'Star shot'.
The preceding images in the magazine are labelled as from the Solar Eclipse, but they clearly aren't as you can see lens flares, but it's possible they were taken close that event.
I can find no references to a 'star shot' anywhere in missions transcripts and reports.
What sparked my curiosity is that along with the usual blue dots that mark image blemishes are several lighter dots in the top half of the image. I've increased the dpi and cropped it for this version:
The obvious candidates for one of the dots is likely to be either Venus, Mercury or Jupiter. I think Mercury is only likely if the Earth is actually occluding the sun. Unfortunately my only software is Stellarium, which I can use to place the viewpoint on either the Moon or Earth, but not in between (unless someone can tell me otherwise).
The image was taken after TEI. and probably much later in the ride home given how thin the sliver of Earth is in AS12-51-7587.
Venus at about 15:00 on the 24th of November 1969 looks promising, but pareidolia is a terrible curse.
So, anyone care to have a go? Are they just image blemishes? Beautifully lit urine crystals? Reflected panel lights? Or are they planets/stars?