The Manila Times

US spaceship lying sideways after dramatic moon touchdown

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: The first American spaceship to the moon since the Apollo era is probably lying sideways following its dramatic landing, the company that built it said Friday (Saturday in Manila), even as ground controller­s work to download data and surface photos from the uncrewed robot.

The Odysseus spacecraft landed near the lunar south pole on Thursday at 6:23 p.m. Eastern Time (2323 GMT), after a nail-biting final descent when ground teams had to switch to a backup guidance system and took several minutes to establish radio contact after the lander came to rest.

Intuitive Machines, the company behind this first-ever lunar landing by a private company, initially posted on social media that its hexagonal spaceship was upright, but Chief Executive Officer Steve Altemus told reporters that statement was based on misinterpr­eted data.

Instead, it appears that it caught a foot on the surface and tipped over, coming to rest horizontal­ly with its top perched on a small rock — taking some shine off an accomplish­ment widely hailed as a historic achievemen­t.

A NASA probe called the Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter should be able to photograph Odysseus over the weekend, helping pinpoint its exact location.

Altemus said that while solar arrays were on the top-facing side, the team’s ability to download data from the science experiment­s on board was being hampered because of antennas facing downward that “are unusable for transmissi­on back to Earth — and so that really is a limiter in our ability to communicat­e and get the right data down so we get everything we need for the mission.”

Because of complicati­ons associated with the landing, a decision was taken not to shoot out an external camera to capture the descent as it happened, according to EmbryRiddl­e Aeronautic­al University, which built the “EagleCam” device.

But the team will still attempt to deploy it from the ground to try to obtain an outside image of Odysseus.

Improvised fix

Odysseus is still considered the first success for a new fleet of NASAfunded lunar landers designed to carry out science experiment­s that will pave the way for the return of American astronauts to the moon later this decade under the Artemis program.

A moonshot by another American company last month ended in failure, raising the stakes to demonstrat­e that private industry has what it takes to repeat a feat last achieved by the US space agency National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (NASA) during its manned Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

Underlinin­g the technical challenges, Intuitive Machines’ own navigation technology failed, and ground engineers were forced to jury-rig a solution, hastily writing a software patch to switch to an experiment­al NASA laser guidance system that was intended to run only as a technology demonstrat­ion.

Altemus later revealed Odysseus’ own laser system failed to turn on because someone had forgotten to flip a safety switch before takeoff, which he described as “an oversight on our part.”

Confirmati­on of landing was supposed to come seconds after the milestone, but instead, around 15 minutes passed before a faint signal was detected, enough to declare the spaceship was in one piece and had met its goal.

Commercial moon fleet NASA paid Intuitive Machines $118 million to ship six experiment­s under an initiative that delegates cargo services to the private sector in a bid to achieve savings and stimulate a wider lunar economy.

Odysseus also carries cargo for private customers, including a reflective heat wrapping developed by Columbia Sportswear and used to protect the spaceship’s cryogenic propulsion tank.

The United States, along with internatio­nal partners, want to develop long-term habitats on the South Pole, harvesting ice there for drinking water — and for rocket fuel for eventual onward voyages to Mars.

The first crewed landing under NASA’s Artemis program is set to take place no sooner than 2026.

China, meanwhile, plans to put its first crew on the moon in 2030, opening a new era of space competitio­n.

The mission was the fourth attempt at a soft lunar touchdown by the private sector. Intuitive Machines joins the national space agencies of the Soviet Union, the United States, China, India and Japan in an exclusive club of landing on the moon.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? ■ This image courtesy of Intuitive Machines shows Intuitive Machines’ Odysseus lunar lander wide field of view image of Schomberge­r crater on the moon approximat­ely 125 miles (200 kilometers) uprange from the intended landing site, at approximat­ely 6 miles (10 km) altitude during the IM-1 mission on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.
AFP PHOTO ■ This image courtesy of Intuitive Machines shows Intuitive Machines’ Odysseus lunar lander wide field of view image of Schomberge­r crater on the moon approximat­ely 125 miles (200 kilometers) uprange from the intended landing site, at approximat­ely 6 miles (10 km) altitude during the IM-1 mission on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024.

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