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    Home » Japan and US firms ready moon landers for Florida launch By Reuters
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    Japan and US firms ready moon landers for Florida launch By Reuters

    userBy userJanuary 15, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    By Joey Roulette

    ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – Two moon landers, one from Japan’s ispace and another from U.S. space firm Firefly, were fastened atop a SpaceX rocket in Florida on Tuesday ahead of an unusual double moonshot launch, underscoring the global rush to peruse the lunar surface.

    Japanese space exploration company ispace will launch its Hakuto-R Mission 2, making its second attempt to land on the moon after an initial mission in April 2023 failed in its final moments because of an altitude miscalculation.

    While Texas-based Firefly Aerospace will launch its first moon lander, Blue Ghost, which would make it the third company to launch a moon lander under NASA’s public-private Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program.

    Intuitive Machines’ moon landing last year, albeit lopsided and partially unsuccessful, marked the first private company and the first CLPS mission to touchdown on the moon. An earlier attempt by CLPS member Astrobotic’s lander failed shortly after launch.

    Countries and private companies worldwide have been focused on the moon in recent years for its potential to host astronaut bases and hold resources that could be mined for in-space applications, making Earth’s natural satellite a stage for national prestige and geopolitical competition akin to the Cold War-era space race.

    Ispace’s Hakuto lander, named Resilience, is carrying $16 million worth of customer missions and six payloads in total, including an in-house “Micro Rover” that will deploy from the lander and collect lunar samples, said ispace Executive Business Director Jumpei Nozaki in an interview.

    Hakuto’s touchdown on the moon’s surface is expected four to five months after launch, or this summer. It will take an energy-efficient path relying heavily on the Earth and moon’s gravity in a winding series of flybys to steer its trajectory.

    Firefly’s Blue Ghost will aim to reach the moon 45 days after launch, around March 2. That lander is carrying 10 payloads from a variety of NASA-funded customers and one from Blue Origin-owned Honeybee Robotics.

    Both landers’ missions will last a full lunar day, or roughly two weeks. They will not survive the frigid lunar nighttime where temperatures can plunge to roughly minus 200 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 128 Celsius).

    NASA with its Artemis program aims to return humans to the moon by 2027 – but likely later – for the first time since 1972, while China plans to put its own crews on the lunar surface by 2030 following a series of robotic missions.

    CLPS missions like Firefly’s Blue Ghost, privately owned but substantially funded by NASA, are meant to study the moon’s surface and stimulate private lunar demand before NASA sends humans there using SpaceX’s Starship and later Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lander.

    But the U.S. space agency faces potential changes to its Artemis program with the incoming administration of Donald Trump, who as president-elect has largely sided with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk’s vision to focus heavily on Mars.

    “We’ve invested in going to the moon and I think everybody wants us to go back to the moon,” Nicky Fox, head of NASA’s science mission directorate who oversees CLPS, told Reuters on Tuesday when asked about potential changes to the moon program.

    “The great thing about NASA science — we do amazing science wherever we go,” she said.





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