A second Intuitive Machines spacecraft simply landed on the moon — and possibly tipped over | TechCrunch


Intuitive Machines has landed a second spacecraft on the moon, only one 12 months after engaging in the feat for the primary time ever. Sadly, very similar to that first try, it appears the corporate’s spacecraft could have tipped on its aspect.

The lunar lander, known as Athena, touched down on the moon’s floor at round 12:30 p.m. ET on Thursday. It’s the second personal spacecraft to land on the moon this week, after Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost touched down on March 2.

Intuitive Machines’ chief know-how officer stated in a post-landing press convention that Athena is someplace contained in the 50-meter touchdown zone on Mons Mouton, a flat-topped mountain on the moon’s south pole. However he stated the corporate was nonetheless engaged on figuring out the place, precisely, Athena touched down.

CEO Steve Altemus added in the course of the convention that the corporate doesn’t suppose Athena is on the “right angle” — spaceflight converse for “it in all probability tipped over.”

Altemus in any other case praised the mission, which he stated went far more easily than final 12 months’s journey to the moon.

The remainder of Athena’s mission now hangs within the stability. The spacecraft, which took off for the moon aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on February 26, is carrying quite a few applied sciences that Intuitive Machines hoped to check out.

One is a passive laser retroreflector array, which Intuitive Machines hopes to make use of to speak with different incoming or orbiting spacecraft. It’s a vital piece of know-how for NASA’s hopes to construct a everlasting moon base — a lot in order that the house company awarded Intuitive Machines a $4.8 billion contract late final 12 months to construct out the communications system. (Solely $150 million of that’s assured.)

Athena can be carrying an ice mining experiment for NASA, which the company had hoped to make use of to find out whether or not there are sufficient pure assets on the moon to in the future make gas or breathable oxygen.

Further payloads embody a rover known as MAPP that’s supposed to check out mobile gear from Nokia, and solid-state storage billed as the primary ever “lunar information heart.”

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