US returns spaceship to the Moon in private sector first
For the first time since the Apollo era, an American spaceship has landed on the Moon: an uncrewed commercial robot, funded by NASA to pave the way for US astronauts to return to Earth’s cosmic neighbour later this decade.
Odysseus, built by Houstonbased Intuitive Machines, touched down near the lunar south pole Thursday at 2323 GMT, after a nail-biting final descent where flight controllers had to switch to an experimental landing system and took several minutes to establish radio contact with the lander after it came to rest.
“Today for the first time in more than a half century, the US has returned to the Moon. Today for the first time in the history of humanity, a commercial company, an American company, launched and led the voyage up there,” NASA administrator Bill Nelson said in a video.
Images from an external “EagleCam” designed to shoot out from the spacecraft during its final seconds of descent could be released early Friday, a member of the team that built it told AFP.
“After troubleshooting communications, flight controllers have confirmed Odysseus is upright and starting to send data,” Intuitive Machines said in its latest update on X.
“Right now, we are working to downlink the first images from the lunar surface.”
A previous moonshot by another American company last month ended in failure, raising the stakes to demonstrate that private industry had what it took to repeat a feat last achieved by US space agency NASA during its manned Apollo 17 mission in 1972.
Underscoring the technical challenges, an onboard navigation system failed and Odysseus instead flew the final leg of its trip using an experimental laser guidance system developed by NASA to run only as a technology demonstration. Confirmation of landing was supposed to come seconds after the milestone, but instead nearly 15 minutes passed as announcers mused whether the craft had come down “off angle.”
Finally, the company’s chief technology officer Tim Crain confirmed “our equipment is on the surface of the Moon and we are transmitting,” as applause broke out in mission control.
Odysseus touched down in Malapert A, an impact crater 300 kilometers from the lunar south pole.
NASA hopes to eventually build a long-term presence and harvest polar ice for both drinking water and rocket fuel for an onward journey to Mars under Artemis, its flagship program.
The current mission is “one of the first forays into the south pole to actually look at the environmental conditions to a place we’re going to be sending our astronauts in the future,” said senior NASA official Joel Kearns.