An uncrewed private spacecraft has reached the moon's orbit, one day ahead of its attempt to land at the lunar south pole.
Intuitive Machines' robotic spacecraft, which launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Feb. 15, beamed back a view of the near side of the moon to flight controllers just six days later. The craft took a speedier path through space to get to the moon than its predecessors over the past year.
On Wednesday, the spacecraft completed its planned main engine burn to get into a circular orbit about 57 miles above the moon. NASA and its contractor intend to broadcast the landing on their respective websites. The event is scheduled for 5:49 p.m. ET Feb. 22.
"Odysseus continues to be in excellent health," the company said on X, formerly known as Twitter, referring to its name for the lander.
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If Intuitive Machines touches down without crashing, it will be the first U.S. spacecraft to complete the quarter-million-mile journey since the last Apollo mission in 1972. Though NASA isn't controlling this spaceflight and doesn't own Odysseus, the agency is paying the company $118 million to deliver six instruments to the moon, among other customers' payloads.
The proposed landing site is Malapert A crater, just under 200 miles from the south pole. Several spacefarers have set their sights on this general region because of its ice. The natural resource, thought to be buried in permanently shadowed craters, is coveted because it could supply drinking water, oxygen, and rocket fuel for future space voyages.
Throughout history, about half of lunar landing attempts have failed, and only one out of three missions that tried to touch down on the moon in 2023 made it without a crash.
Already this year, another NASA contractor, Astrobotic Technologies, tried to get to the moon but never reached lunar orbit due to a detrimental fuel leak discovered early in the flight. In January, Japan became the fifth nation ever to land a spacecraft on the moon, but not without incident: It got there upside down and suffered significant power-generation problems.
NASA selected Intuitive Machines as one of several vendors for its Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative to explore the moon over the next few years. The program has recruited the private sector to help deliver cargo, conduct experiments, and demonstrate new technology, as well as send back crucial data. Through these contracts, NASA wants to see a regular cadence of moon missions to prepare for astronauts' return to the moon in 2026 or later.
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"What we've asked industry to do, which is soft land and operate on the moon's surface, is not easy at all. It's extremely difficult, as you probably have seen for lunar landing attempts just in the month of January," said Joel Kearns, NASA's deputy associate administrator for exploration, during a call with reporters.
No commercial company has achieved this feat so far, although a few have tried.
Landing on the moon is hard because its exosphere — an extremely thin atmosphere of gasses barely held by the moon's gravity — provides virtually no drag to slow a spacecraft down as it approaches the ground. Furthermore, there are no GPS systems on the moon to help guide a craft to its landing spot.
Despite numerous failures anticipated from the new, inexperienced players in space exploration, people can expect to be dazzled by their cosmic views, such as the stunning Intuitive Machines images of the past week.
"Pretty cool when a lunar lander takes a picture of its ride to space!" SpaceX said in a post on X last week. "Wishing @Int_Machines and IM-1 a safe and soft landing on the Moon."
Topics NASA