The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Private US spaceship takes off for the Moon

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KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, United States: A US spaceship attempting a lunar landing lifted off early Thursday from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the second such private-led effort this year after the first ended in failure.

Intuitive Machines, the Houston company leading mission ‘IM-1’, hopes to become the first non-government entity to achieve a soft touchdown on the Moon, and to land the first US robot on the surface since the Apollo missions more than five decades ago.

Its hexagonal-shaped Nova-C lander named ‘Odysseus’ blasted off on top of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket shortly after 1am local time. IM-1 was supposed to blast off on Wednesday, but the launch was postponed after SpaceX discovered abnormal temperatur­es as it attempted to fuel up the lander. Space agency Nasa confirmed the lander had successful­ly lifted off.

“Confirmed: The Nova-C lander has separated and continues its trip to the Moon,” Nasa wrote on social media platform X.

The lander has a new type of supercoole­d liquid methane and oxygen engine giving it the power to reach its destinatio­n quickly, avoiding prolonged exposure to a region of high radiation surroundin­g the Earth known as the Van Allen belt.

Intuitive Machine’s Trent Martin told reporters this week that the “opportunit­y to return the United States to the Moon for the first time since 1972 is a feat of engineerin­g that demands a hunger to explore.”

Despite the postponeme­nt, the craft is still due to reach its landing site Malapert A on Feb 22, an impact crater 300 kilometres from the south pole.

Nasa hopes to eventually build a long-term presence and harvest ice there for both drinking water and rocket fuel under Artemis, its flagship Moon-to-Mars programme.

Nasa paid Intuitive Machines US$118 million to ship science hardware to better understand and mitigate environmen­tal risks for astronauts, the first of whom are scheduled to land no sooner than 2026.

There is more colourful cargo aboard as well, including a digital archive of human knowledge and 125 mini-sculptures of the Moon by the artist Jeff Koons.

After touchdown, the payloads are expected to run for roughly seven days before lunar night sets in on the south pole, rendering Odysseus inoperable.

IM-1 is the second mission under a Nasa initiative called Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS), which the space agency created to delegate cargo services to the private sector to achieve savings and to stimulate a wider lunar economy.

The first, by Pittsburgh-based Astrobotic, launched in January, but its Peregrine spacecraft experience­d an engine anomaly that caused a fuel leak and it was eventually brought back to burn up in Earth’s atmosphere.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from launch pad LC-39A at the Kennedy Space Center with the Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C moon lander mission, in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
— AFP photo A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from launch pad LC-39A at the Kennedy Space Center with the Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C moon lander mission, in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

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