iSpace's Failed Attempt to Land on the Moon
Category Space Friday - April 28 2023, 10:41 UTC - 1 year ago Private space company iSpace lost contact with its Hakuto-R spacecraft on its attempt to become the first private mission to land on the moon this morning. They managed to achieve 8 out of 10 mission milestones and were able to gain valuable data that could be applied to their second mission in 2024. The company hopes to ramp up the frequency of trips to the moon, develop and sell lunar resources, and land Artemis astronauts on the moon in the future.
iSpace, a private space company based in Japan, lost contact with its Hakuto-R spacecraft as it attempted to become the first private mission to land on the moon this morning. "We have to assume that we could not complete the landing on the lunar surface," iSpace CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said during a livestream. "Our engineers will continue to investigate the situation, and we will update you with further information when we finish the investigation." .
Hakuto-R launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket last December. It took a long but efficient route, looping way out past the moon before using several orbital adjustments and the gravity of the Earth, moon, and sun to enter lunar orbit last month. On April 13, after a few more final adjustments, it locked into a circular orbit 100 kilometers above the lunar surface.
Early in its landing attempt, the spacecraft dipped behind the moon making communications impossible. The team reestablished contact as it rounded the lunar horizon and began its descent. During the livestream, iSpace showed a simulation of the landing. The ride to the surface began with a deceleration burn and a series of attitude adjustments, bending the spacecraft's trajectory toward the surface and flipping its orientation.
But just as it neared its landing site at Atlas Crater, the team lost all communications. Because they'd previously been in contact, Hakamada said, the presumed cause was a hard landing on the surface. Hakuto-R was the second attempt to land on the moon by a private company. SpaceIL's Beresheet lander crashed in 2019 when its main engine failed.
The faces of the iSpace team said it all. It was an extremely disappointing outcome. However, Hakamada said, because they'd had contact with the spacecraft until its final moments, they were able to gather valuable data that would be applied to future missions. iSpace achieved eight of its ten mission milestones, demonstrating an ability to navigate to the moon and enter a stable orbit. As the recent inaugural launches of SpaceX's Starship and Relativity Space's Terran 1 rocket show, the development of new space systems involves risk and, often, failure.
"We will keep going. Never quit in our quest," Hakamada said.The company already has a second mission in the works for 2024. If that lander succeeds where Hakuto-R failed, the team plans to ramp up the frequency of trips to the moon. The business will transport and operate scientific and government payloads, and longer term, they hope to develop and sell lunar resources. Late last year, Japan issued a license to iSpace to sell lunar dust to NASA as a test case for such future transactions.
iSpace is just one of a new wave of space companies working in low-Earth orbit and beyond. SpaceX's reusable Falcon 9 rockets have already reduced the cost of getting to space, and the company hopes to make another leap with its Starship rocket. SpaceX and others are building infrastructure in orbit, including Earth observation and telecommunications networks. Meanwhile, NASA is partnering with private companies to develop commercial space stations that may succeed the ISS and funding SpaceX's Starship in the hopes it can land Artemis astronauts on the moon.
If the private space industry is successful, the tipping point will be profitable, reliable access to space.
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