Lunar Lander Launched, Separated Successfully In Latest U.S. Moon Attempt | CBC News

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A moon lander was launched from Florida early on Thursday on a mission to conduct the first U.S. lunar touchdown in more than a half century and the first by a privately owned spacecraft.

Plans currently call for Odysseus, the lander, to reach the moon’s south pole on Feb. 22Thomson Reuters

· Posted: Feb 15, 2024 7:10 AM EST | Last Updated: February 15

See the moment the lunar lander is deployedThe Intuitive Machines-made lander successfully detached from SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket’s second stage and is now moon-bound.

A moon lander was launched from Florida early on Thursday on a mission to conduct the first U.S. lunar touchdown in more than a half century and the first by a privately owned spacecraft.

The Nova-C lander built by Houston-based Intuitive Machines, dubbed Odysseus, lifted off shortly after 1 a.m. ET atop a two-stage Falcon 9 rocket flown by SpaceX from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral.

A live NASA-SpaceX online video feed showed the two-stage, 25-storey rocket roaring off the launch pad and streaking into the dark sky over Florida’s Atlantic coast, trailed by a fiery yellowish plume of exhaust.

About 48 minutes after launch, the six-legged lander was shown being released from Falcon 9’s upper stage about 139 miles above Earth and drifting away on its voyage to the moon.

“IM-1 Odysseus lunar lander separation confirmed,” a mission controller was heard saying.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is shown after liftoff from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. (Joe Skipper/Reuters)Moments later, mission operations in Houston received its first radio signals from Odysseus as the lander began an automated process of powering on its systems and orienting itself in space, according to webcast commentators.

Although considered an Intuitive Machines mission, the IM-1 flight is carrying six NASA payloads of instruments designed to gather data about the lunar environment ahead of NASA’s planned return of astronauts to the moon later this decade.

NASA science is nestled aboard @Int_Machines’s Nova-C lander, set to launch to the Moon on a @SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. Landing near the Malapert A crater will help us learn more about the lunar South Pole, a big step in our #Artemis campaign. https://t.co/oT7m0a8PwX

—@NASAU.S. aims to end 52-year moon absenceThe launch came a month after the lunar lander of another private firm, Pittsburgh’s Astrobotic Technology, suffered a propulsion system leak on its way to the moon shortly after being placed in orbit on Jan. 8 by a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Vulcan rocket making its debut flight.

The failure of Astrobotic’s Peregrine lander, which was also flying NASA payloads to the moon, marked the third time a private company had been unable to achieve a “soft landing” on the lunar surface, following ill-fated efforts by companies from Israel and Japan.

WATCH l Will Initiative succeed, unlike most recent attempt:

A new U.S. lander is moon-bound. Will it make it?A SpaceX rocket carrying a lunar lander successfully launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Experts hope the liftoff will be just the first step in a process that could see Odysseus, a four-metre tall, six-legged lander from Intuitive Machines set down near the moon’s South Pole.

Those mishaps illustrated the risks NASA faces in leaning more heavily on the commercial sector than it had in the past to realize its space flight goals.

Plans call for Odysseus to reach its destination after a weeklong flight, with a Feb. 22 landing at crater Malapert A near the moon’s south pole.

If successful, the flight would represent the first controlled descent to the lunar surface by a U.S. spacecraft since the final Apollo crewed moon mission in 1972, and the first by a private company.

The feat also would mark the first journey to the lunar surface under NASA’s Artemis moon program, as the U.S. races to return astronauts to Earth’s natural satellite before China lands its own crewed spacecraft there.

WATCH l Artemis risks accepted for greater goal, Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen says:

Canadian astronauts prepare for Artemis II mission around the moonJeremy Hansen is slated to become the first Canadian astronaut to embark on a mission around the moon, when Artemis II takes off in 2025. The Canadian Space Agency offered a behind-the-scenes peek at how crews are preparing physically and mentally for this monumental voyage.

Crewed mission pushed backIM-1 is the latest test of NASA’s strategy of paying for the use of spacecraft built and owned by private companies — in this case, Elon Musk’s SpaceX — to slash the cost of the Artemis missions, envisioned as precursors to human exploration of Mars.

By contrast, during the Apollo era, NASA bought rockets and other technology from the private sector, but owned and operated them itself.

NASA announced last month that it was delaying its target date for a first crewed Artemis moon landing from 2025 to late 2026, while China has said it was aiming for 2030.

Small landers such as Nova-C are expected to get there first, carrying instruments to closely survey the lunar landscape, its resources and potential hazards. Odysseus will focus on space weather interactions with the moon’s surface, radio astronomy, precision landing technologies and navigation.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from pad 39A at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., early Thursday. The rocket is carrying to the moon a lunar lander built by Houston company Intuitive Machines. (John Raoux/The Associated Press)Intuitive Machine’s IM-2 mission is scheduled to land at the lunar south pole in 2024, followed by an IM-3 mission later in the year with several small rovers.

Last month, Japan became the fifth country to place a lander on the moon, with its space agency JAXA achieving an unusually precise “pinpoint” touchdown of its SLIM probe last month. Last year, India became the fourth nation to land on the moon, after Russia failed in an attempt the same month.

The U.S., the former Soviet Union and China are the only other countries that have carried out successful soft lunar touchdowns. China scored a world’s first in 2019 by achieving the first landing on the far side of the moon.

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