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Intuitive Machines releases moon landing shots as trip nears ending

- By Richard Tribou

Nearly six days after making history by becoming the first commercial company to successful­ly land on the moon, Intuitive Machines released the first images of its lander on the surface.

The images show the moments during touch down of the Houston-based company’s Nova-C lander Odysseus — nicknamed “Odie” — as it skidded across a crater near the moon’s south pole, and its final resting spot not in an upright position, but not entirely on its side either.

“Here we are. Our Odie conducted the brilliant six-day mission on the surface,” said company CEO Steve Altemus during a press conference with NASA officials. “You see that we were tilted over slightly, still more upright than we initially thought. We did land upright, we captured data, and then we tilted over slowly.”

The image taken Tuesday by the lander’s narrow-field-of-view camera was the first successful shot of it on the surface post-landing after previous images had unusable data and helped illustrate the angle to which it finally came to rest.

Two other images taken Feb. 22 showed the damaged landing gear.

“This is a picture of Odie on the surface of the moon touching down with its engine firing,” Altemus said. “The landing gear pieces [are] broken off there on the left of the image. The landing gear did what it was supposed to do and protect the lander as it landed on the surface.”

Several of the 12 payloads on board had photograph­ic capabiliti­es, but the images released Wednesday were from equipment built into the lander itself.

One of the private payloads was a set of cameras built by Daytona Beach’s Embry-Riddle Aeronautic­al University students and faculty called EagleCam, named after the school’s mascot. It was originally planned to be deployed before landing and try to take a photo of the lander as it made its final descent, but teams opted to hold off on that to focus on solving problems during landing.

Altemus said EagleCam was powered up again Wednesday morning, and they ejected it about 13 feet away.

“However, either in the camera or in the Wi-Fi signal back to the lander something might not be working correctly,” Altemus said. “So the Embry-Riddle team is working on that and wrestling with that to see if there’s anything they could do.”

Altemus said he’d like to give EagleCam another shot on a future mission.

Because of the angle, which Altemus said is likely at around 30 degrees tilt, the

solar power panels were not able to get as much power over the last week, and some of the landers’ antenna were not delivering data at the expected rate.

Those were the reasons mission managers decided to focus on getting as much informatio­n returned to Earth as possible, which shortened the mission’s hopeful lifespan by a few days.

Altemus said the company expects the lander to have complete loss of power Wednesday night.

The six NASA and six private payloads on board are not designed to endure the cold lunar night, but Intuitive Machines will try and reboot Odysseus in a few weeks once it’s back in the sunlight to see if teams on Earth can still communicat­e with it.

The mission, which launched from Kennedy Space Center atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Feb. 15, was the second private lunar launch as part of NASA’s Commercial Lunar Lander Payloads (CLPS) program.

The first from Pittsburgh-based Astrobotic in January, ended with its lander suffering a propellant leak soon after launch that led to that company eventually bringing it back to burn up on re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere.

The Intuitive Machines mission marked the first U.S.-based lunar mission to successful­ly make a soft landing since Apollo 17’s landing in 1972.

NASA paid Intuitive Machines $118 million with the goal of building the lander, procuring a launch provider, and taking care of all the communicat­ions during he mission. In turn, NASA handed the company its six payloads worth about $12 million, while Intuitive Machines lined up the other six payloads.

Intuitive Machines has two more of what is so far seven additional NASA CLPS missions already under contract with the next expected before the end of the year.

“Before the mission, we had an absolute sense of humility, yet relied on our technical excellence and trusted years of experience and this incredible team that we have,” Altemus said. “Following this — I would say — unqualifie­d success of a mission. I’m emboldened.”

 ?? NASA ?? This image from a NASA news conference Wednesday shows Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lander Odysseus on the moon’s surface.
NASA This image from a NASA news conference Wednesday shows Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lander Odysseus on the moon’s surface.

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