The Hamilton Spectator

Moon lander crash blamed on software glitch, location switch

- MARCIA DUNN

A private Japanese moon lander went into free-fall while trying to land on the lunar surface last month, company officials said Friday, blaming a software issue and a lastminute switch in the touchdown location.

The spacecraft belonging to the company ispace was originally supposed to land in a flat plain. But the target was changed to a crater before December’s launch. The crater’s steep sides apparently confused the onboard software, and the two-metre spacecraft went into a free-fall from less than five kilometres up, slamming into the lunar surface.

The estimated speed at impact was more than 100 metres per second, said the company’s chief technology officer, Ryo Ujiie.

NASA’s Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter photograph­ed the crash site the next day as it flew overhead, revealing a field of debris as well as lunar soil hurled aside by the impact.

Computer simulation­s done in advance of the landing attempt did not incorporat­e the terrain of the new landing site, Ujiie said.

CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said the company is still on track to attempt another moon landing in 2024, and that all the lessons learned will be incorporat­ed into the next try. A third landing attempt is planned for 2025.

If successful, ispace would have been the first private company to land a spacecraft on the moon. Only three government­s have achieved that: Russia, the United States and China. An Israeli nonprofit tried in 2019, but its attempt also ended in a crash landing.

Named Hakuto, Japanese for white rabbit, the spacecraft and its experiment­s were insured, according to Hakamada. The United Arab Emirates had a mini lunar rover on board that was lost in the crash.

Two U.S. companies have lunar landers awaiting launch later this year from Cape Canaveral, in partnershi­p with NASA.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An illustrati­on depicts ispace’s Hakuto spacecraft on the surface of the moon with the Earth in the background. CEO Takeshi Hakamada said the company is still on track to attempt another moon landing in 2024.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An illustrati­on depicts ispace’s Hakuto spacecraft on the surface of the moon with the Earth in the background. CEO Takeshi Hakamada said the company is still on track to attempt another moon landing in 2024.

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