Khaleej Times

Israeli spacecraft crashes onto the moon after technical failures

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yehud — Israeli spacecraft Beresheet crashed onto the moon on Thursday after a series of technical failures during its final descent, shattering hopes of a historic controlled landing on the lunar surface.

The unmanned robotic lander suffered periodic engine and communicat­ions failures during the landing sequence, which lasted around 21 minutes, the support team said.

Beresheet, whose name is Hebrew for the biblical phrase ‘In the beginning’, had travelled through space for seven weeks in a series of expanding orbits around Earth before crossing into the moon’s gravity last week.

The final manoeuvre on Wednesday brought it into a tight elliptical orbit around the moon, around 15km from the surface at its closest.

From there it was a short, nailbiting and ultimately disappoint­ing conclusion.

“It seems that a failure in our inertial measuremen­ts unit caused a chain of events in the spacecraft avionics which cut off the engines and caused us to lose the mission,” said Opher Doron, general manager of the space division at Israel

Aerospace Industries (IAI).

So far, only three nations have succeeded in carrying out a “soft”, or controlled, landing on the lunar surface: the United States, the Soviet Union and China.

Beresheet would have been the first craft to land on the moon that was not the product of a government programme. It was built by state-owned IAI and Israeli nonprofit space venture SpaceIL with $100 million funded almost entirely by private donors.

Still, the spacecraft achieved some milestones.

“It is by far the smallest, the cheapest spacecraft ever to get to the moon,” said Doron. “It’s been an amazing journey, I hope we get a chance for another one.”

Shaped like a round table with four carbon-fibre legs, Beresheet stood about 1.5 metres tall. It blasted off from Florida’s Cape Canaveral on February 21 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and entered Earth’s orbit about 34 minutes after launch. Its circuitous flight path was around 4 million miles. A direct route from the Earth to the moon covers roughly 240,000 miles. —

 ?? AFP ?? People watch a screen showing a picture taken by the Beresheet spacecraft of the moon surface in the Israeli city of Netanya. —
AFP People watch a screen showing a picture taken by the Beresheet spacecraft of the moon surface in the Israeli city of Netanya. —

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