Intuitive Machines: Athena Lander reached the moon – but appears to have fallen over

IM-2 mission in low lunar court

Intuitive machines

Intuitive Machines’ Athena Lander has reached the moon, but it seems to have fauln over. The lander still works, but it is not yet clear which parts of its mission it will still be able to perform.

The spacecraft was launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from NASAS Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Cape Canaveral, Florida on February 27. It landed on March 6, but the landing was not entirely successful and its exact rent or orientation on the moon’s surface is still unclear.

“We don’t think we in the right attitude on the moon’s surface once again,” said Intuitive Machine’s CEO Stephen Altemus at a press conference shortly after landing. This is a similar result as the company’s last attempt to land on the moon: Odysseus spaces vessel. It marked the first time that a private company had landed a spacecraft on the lunar surface, but it tilted over to its side and was unable to send back a lot of data.

Athena has a number of scientific instruments, but perhaps the most important thing of this regulations and our live to explore a new field (Trident), a NASA experience designed to drill up to a meter through the Moon’s Earth. It is intended to take samples from underground and analyze their content, look for wateris and other chemical compounds.

“This experience marks the milestone of the opinion as it will be the first robot drilling activity behavior in the Moon’s south pole,” Jacqueline Quinn said at a press conference on February 25. If Trident Doe still works, “it’s an important step toward understanding and exploiting lunar resources to support future investigation,” she said.

As part of the IM-2 mission, Athena wore several rover with it to the moon. One of those called Grace after computer scientist and mathematician Grace jumps is designed to jump around the surface as opposed to any rover that has come in front of it, and fires small boosters to jump up to 100 meters in the air and travel at a distance 200 meters. Grace is intended to explore the strange, permanently shady craters of the moon.

Athena’s operators have been able to send the craft commands and beat it and its scientific payload on and off and call some data back to Earth. The solar panels also work to charge Landers electronics. It seems to be good news, but the team is still working to find out which of the instruments will be able to achieve some of their scientific goals, Altemus said.

This is part of a Broads push for increased exploration in the moon, partly in preparation for planned human missions over the next decade. Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost Lander came right to the moon on March 2nd, and resilience lands from the Japanese company Ispace is on the way.

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